ir.'^-^'i;^Bii:i^ '., . . J.' ■ 'I , »'*"lii£ L "I'.^'JS^-'- t^^^^^i^' €^' "■•^ f^ ■Di?TMr'i?'rr»M ki t ♦J PRINCETON, N. J. Presented by VV-5^^^^» \ '-'%■ ♦•♦^t! • .n.%^ mjs^. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT CONNECTED, IN THE HISTORY OF THE JEWS, AKD NEIGHBOURING NATIONS; PROM THE DECLENSION OF THE KINGDOMS OF ISRAEL AND JUDAH, TO THE TIME OF CHRIST. y BY HUMPHREY PRIDEAUX, D. D. DJEAN OF NORWICH. FIFTEENTH AMERICAN, FROM THE TWENTIETH LONDON EDITION. TO WHICH IS PREFIXED, THE LIFE OF THE AUTHOR, CONTAINING SOME LETTERS WHICH HE WROTE IN DEFENCE AND ILLUS- TRATION OF CERTAIN PARTS OF HIS CONNEXIONS. THE WHOLE ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS AND PLATES- IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS 329 & 331 PEARL STREET, FRANKLIN SQUARE. 1855. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE DANIEL, EARL OF NOTTINGHAM, PRESIDENT OP HIS MAJESTY'S MOST HONOURABLE PRIVY COUNCIL. My Lord, — It being by your recommendation to your nobte father, that I was by hiin made Prebendary of the Cathedral Church of Norwich, while he was Lord Chancellor of England, and it being also by your Lordship's like favourable recommenda- t on of me to her late Majesty, Queen Anne, that I was promoted to be Dean of the same church, I humbly offer unto your Lordship this product of my studies, in a grateful acknowledgment of the favours I have received from you. And, if the public receive any benefit from it (as I hope some may,) nothing is more just and reasonable, than that they should receive it through your Lord- ship's hands, who, in having been so much a patron to the Author, have acquired thereby the best title to all the fruits of my labours. What I now offer unto your Lordship is only the first part of what is intended. If God gives life, the second shall follow, and beg its passage into the world under the same patronage. The only additional favour I am now capable of receiving, is your Lordship's kind acceptance of this expression of my gratitude-, which I humbly pray from" your hands; and I am, Mv Lord, Your most obedient, and Most obliged humble Servant, HUMPHREY PRIDEAUX THE AUTHOR'S LIFE 1)r. Humphrey Prideaux was bora at Padstow, in the county of Cornwall, on the 3d of May, A. D. 1648, being the third son of Edmund Prideaux, Esq. by Bridgett his wife, who was the daughter of John Moyle of Bake, Esq. in the same county. He was by both his parents descended from ancient and honour- able famiUes, well known in that county. The doctor being a younger brother, and designed by his parents for the church, as soon as he was of fit age he was sent abroad to school, first to Liskard, in Cornwall, then to Bodmin, in the same county, and from thence removed to Westminster, under the famous Dr. Busby, where he was soon chosen King's scholar; and after having been in that college three years, was from thence elected to Christ-church, Oxford, and admitted into a student's piace in the year 1668, by Dr. John Fell, dean of that college; and in Trinity Term, A. D. 1672, he commenced bachelor of arts. As soon as he had taken that degree, he was employed by Dr. Fell, who had at that time the management of the public printing-press in that university, in an edition of Lucius Floims, and directed to add notes thereto, which he did accord ingly. These notes contain only references to other authors, showing where other ancient historians have treated more at large of matters, which Florus has only related in epitome. After this, there was put into his hands, out of the Bodleian library, a manu- script copy of Johannes Antiochenus Malela, a Greek historian, in order to have it fitted for the press by his care: but he, on perusing it, thought it a very fabu- lous and trifling book, not worth the printing; and upon his giving this judgment of it, the design was quite laid aside. This book, however, has been since pub- lished by the learned Dr. Hody, professor of Greek in the same university. About this time, the doctor had the misfortune to lose his brother Nicholas, for whom he had conceived a particular affection, on account of his promising parts, and the great progress he had made in literature. He died of the small- pox, in the eiglateenth year of his age, at Corpus Cknsti college, Oxori, where he had been a scholar three years; and lies buried in the cloister near the chapel, with a mural monument erected to his memory, which is still to be seen there. It was about this time that the Lord Henry Howard, then earl of Norwich, and afterward duke of Norfolk, made a present to the university of Oxford, of those marbles, which are called the Arundel marbles, being the collection of his grandfather Thomas, earl of Arundel: and these being set up in the court before the theatre, as there were several very curious and valuable inscriptions upon them, it was thought proper, that they should be published with a comment to explain them; and Mr. Humphrey Prideaux, at that time the only bachelor of arts, was appointed to this work. Accordingly he undertook it, and two years afterward, in May, 1676, published his book, entitled Marmora Oxoniensia, in cne volume in folio, printed at the university press, and dedicated to the said earl of Norwich. In this work he has given us all the aforesaid inscriptions a< large, with a comment after each, tending to illustrate and explain them, and has added by way of appendix, an account of some marbles collected by Mr. Seldcn, and Sertorius Ursatus's Commeiitarius de notjs Roma7>.orum. . This book being published when he was but twenty-six years of age, a year after he had taken his master of arts degree, gained him great reputation in the university, and was well received in the world, especially among foreigners in Germany, France, and Italy; and the demand for it among the learned was such, that it grew ver}^ scarce within a few years after it had been printed, and was not to be had, but at an advanced price. The learned Huetius in his Dononsiratio Evangelica, prop. 4. cap. 2. § 14, says of it, " Plurima hujusmodi suppeditat Li- 6 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. ber Tnscriptionum Gruteri: at nihil in hoc genere marmora Oxoniensia sequipa- rate queat, quibus Insigniores Priscorum Graecorum Epochse, Fcedus Smyrnaeo runQ et Magnentium, aUaque egregia vetustatis Monumenta inscripta sunt." This book has suffered much in passing through the press, and is full of typo- graphical errors; which was owing to the neghgence of the pubhc corrector of the university press, who took no sort of care in correcting it, but suffered it to come out with all the faults, as it came from thence. The author for these and other reasons (particularly as he was called upon for a sheet every week, whether he was ready or not) never had any opinion or esteem for this work, and speaks of it himself in his preface in the following manner: "Ac sic tandem post ex- actum Anni spatium iisdem semper gradibus, quibus typographus progressus faciens, operi meo citius timeo quam felicius finem imposui, illudque jam trado, candide Lector, in manus tuas: si in eo invenias me aliquid rectius dicere, utere in commodum tuum; si in nonnullis errasse, ne incuses; spectes cetatem meam; spectes difficillimas scribendi conditiones; reputa quam pauci sunt qui, in his circumstantiis positipossunt melius: iis igitur condona quicquid in hoc opere culpandum est: a maturioribus studiis si Deus vitam dederit et valetudinem ferendis Laboribus idoneam, spera meliora." Mr. Prideaux having been ordered at the first publication of this book to present one to the lord chancellor Finch, this introduced him into his lordship's patronage, who soon after sent to him, at Christ-church, Mr. Charles Finch, one of his lordship's sons, to be his pupil. He was afterward elected feUow of All Souls College, and there commenced doctor of laws; but died soon after, before he could make any appearance in the world. In the beginning of the year 1679, the rectory of St. Clemens in Oxford, which is in the gift of the great seal, falling void, Mr. Prideaux was by the lord chancellor Finch presented to it, and instituted and inducted accordingly. This living he served constantly for several years. The same year Mr. Prideaux published two tracts owl oi Mahnonides in Hebrew, to which he added a Latin translation and annotations. The book bears the title of De Jure Pauperis et Peregrini apud Judceos. This he did in consequence of his having been appointed Dr.. Busby's Hebrew lecturer in the college of Christ- church; and his principal view in printing this book w^as to introduce young students in the Hebrew language into the knowledge of the Rabinical dialect, and to teach them to read it without points. In the latter end of the year 1680, the parliament meeting at Oxford, he attended on the lord chancellor Finch there as his chaplain; but this w^as of short continuance; for the parliament was dissolved within ten days after its first meeting. The l-2th of May following his patron the lord Finch was created earl of Nottingham on the decease of Charles Howard, the last earl of Notting- ham of that family, by whose death the title was now become extinct. About midsummer following, A. D. 1681, Dr. Herbert Astley, dean of Norwich, dying, Dr. John Sharp, formerly chaplain to the said lord chancellor, prebendary of Norwich, and rector of St. Giles in the Fields, was promoted to that deanery; upon which his prebend in that church, which was in the gift of the great seal, falling void, the lord chancellor wrote a very kind letter to Mr. Prideaux at Oxford, to let him know that he gave it him; and accordingly on the loth of August after, he was installed into it, and kept his first- residence at that churcli, in the months of December and January foUowmg. The other prebendaries of the same church, at Mr. Prideaux's first admission into it were, Mr. Josejth Loveland, Dr. Hezekiah Burton, Dr. William Hawkins, Dr. William Smyth, and Mr. Natlianiel Hoilges: bat Dr. Burton dying soon after, Mr. Richard Kidder, afterward dean of Peterborough, and bishop of Bath and Wells, succeeded him. W^ith him Mr. Prideaux contracted a very particular friendship, which continued 10 the time of Dr. Kidder's death, who w^as unfortunately killed by the fall of the roof of his bedchamber, in the great storm, A. D. 1703. On the 15th of November, 1682, Mr. Prideaux was admitted to the decree of THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 7 bachelor in divinity, and soon after had the misfortune to lose his patron, the lorJ chancellor Nottingham, who died on the ISth of November following, and was .■succeeded by sir Francis North, lord chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas. On the 17th of February, A. D. 1682-3, he was instituted to the rectory ol Bladen cum Capella de Woodstock, in the county of Oxford. Dr. Thomas Marshall, then dean of Gloucester, and rector of Lincoln College, avus his pre- decessor in this living, who having resigned it, Mr. Pridcaux was presented thereto, by the brd keeper North, it being in the gift of the great seal, held it with his student's place, at Christ-church, by virtue of his being library keeper of that college; for as there is no salary belonging to that office, except forty shillings per annum paid to a deputy, the student, who has it, has the privilege of holding one living without vacating his student's place by his institution thereto. On the 15th of October, A. D. 1(583, Mr. Prideaux lost his father, who died in the 78th year of his age. He was descended of a family, that had Hoarished in many places both in Cornv/aU and Devonshire, at Prideaux, Orcharton, Ad- deston, Thuborough, Soldon, Netherton, Ford Abby, and Padstow; as appe rs from the herald's books, Camden, Leland's Itinerary, Fuller's Worthies, Risdon's Survey of Devon, Carew's Survey of Cornwall, and Prince's Worthies of Devon; who all make honourable mention of this family. He was a gentleman of great worth, sobriety, and discretion, and well learned in most parts of'literature, thai became a gentleman to know. He studied first at Sidney College in Cambridg., where he was under the care of Dr. Paul Michelthwayt, afterward master of t.i- temple: from thence removed to Exeter college in Oxford, at the invitation of Dr. John Prideauii:, then rector of that coUege; and from thence he Avent to the Inns of Court, in order to malce himself acquainted with the laws of the realm; and after this travelled abroad, and spent some time in foreign countries. By these means he improved his natural understanding, and acquired those accom- plishments, which made him honoured and respected beyond most of his time in the county where he lived; to which he was very useful in the commission of the peace and lieutenancy. From the restoration to the time of his death, he had the chief management of aftairs in the county of Cornwall, which, on ac- count of his known wisdom and integrity, were mostly referred to him. Mr. Prideaux now wholly gave himself up to his studies, and attended to the duties of his function, going constantly to Bladen and Woodstock every Sunday from Christ-church. And tliat there might be no deficiency in the ministerial duties at any time, he kept a curate resident at Woodstock, to attend the en; Nr. that both churches were constantly served morning and afternoon every Sunilz.}'. And that they might always continue to be so served. Dr. Fell, who was tiieB bishop of Oxford, as well as dean of Christ-church, pro] e .ted tlie building ?.:; house for the minister of Woodstock; and having accnxlingly pT'r."lia''pd ?. pi Vol. I.— 2 • 10 • THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. making the entries with his own hand, till about two years before his death; when he directed it to be done by another. About this time the doctor was engaged in a controversy with the papists: for king James, upon his coming to the crown, having made an open profession of their religion, they imagined, that supported by his authority, they should carry all before them, and bring the whole nation over to their persuasion; and to this end, sent out emissaries into all parts of the kingdom. Now those who Avere sent into the country, they would not trust with the whole controversy, for fear of overburdening their abilities, but assigned a particular point to each, which he was to insist upon, and beyond which he was not to meddle. And the point assigned to those, who came to make conversions in Norfolk and Norwich, was 'The Invalidity of the Orders of the Church of England,' which they were di- rected to make out by such arguments as their superiors had furnished them with; and from hence they were to infer, that having no priesthood, we could have no sacraments; and consequently could be no church, nor any salvation be had among us. The first who appeared there with this argument, was one Webster, who had formerly been curate of St. Margaret's, in King's Lynn, for the dean and chapter of Norwich, who have the appropriation of that church, and being turned out from thence for his notorious misdemeanours, went to London, and there kept a private school. But on king James's coming to the crown, seeing ; the great encouragement that popery met Avith, and imagining it would turn to his advantage, he early embraced that interest, hoping to rise by it, and for a greater show of zeal came into Norfolk, as a missionary for popery, with the ar- gument above mentioned, and had the confidence to send a challenge to the bishop of Norwich, appointing a time when he woidd come to him at his palace, &i:.d dispute that point with him. On this the bishop desired Dr. Sharp and Dr. Prldcaax to be present at the time appointed, when Webster came, bringing with hiin ojit» Mr. Acton, a priest of the order of the Jesuits, and who resided at Nor- wich, for the service of those of the Roman communion in that city. When all Wf-re 6'oated, Webster began to read a paper, which he called a preface to the dispnt'ition; whereupon the bishop interrupting him, called him to an account for )iis apostacy, and reproved him for that, as well as for tlie present insult, in ti.'e n^anner he deserved; u])on this Webster being much offended, rose up in gf'/st linger, and departing abruptly, broke oft' the conference. Both Dr. Sharp ar-d r*r. Prideaux offered to answer his arguments, if he woidd have proposed fi.em; but he let them know, that he disdained to dispute with any but the bislcor himself; and so the conference ended. Not long after, Mr. Acton ba-^ing perverted a brewer in Norwich, this produced a dispute on the same point, be- tw«-en Mr. Acton, on the one part, and Mr. Earbury and Mr. Kipping, two Pro- tcati!Dt divines, on the other; upon which a gentleman of Norwich, who was present at the conference, pretended not to have received satisfaction from what was said for the validity of our orders, addressed himself in a letter to Dr. Pri- deaux about it; to which he returned an answer the day after, November 11, 1687. Hence followed several letters on both sides upon the same subject; and the last t^ e doctor wrote on this occasion was a A'^ery long one, containing the whole stitt^ of the controversy. But by the time he had finished it, understand- ing that the gentleman, to Avhom it was intended to be sent, was gone over to the popish communion, and irrecoverably determined in it, the doctor did not think it worth his while to get a copy of it Avrote out for him, or concern himself any farther about him, and therefore thrcAV aside his papers in his study, as no farther useful to the end they Avere originally intended. In the beginning of A.pril following, this gentleman died> oAvning himself a member of that commu- nion, upon whicli the pajjists were resolved to bury him in the cathedral church, and bring liim thither in a solemn procession, by way of triumph: but the doc- tor being then in his residence at the church, was as fully determined to obstruct this design, and gave orders, that no grave there should be made for him. This being matter of great disappointment to them, they held a meeting at the goat THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. |J tavern in Norwich, to con.-ult about it, and from thence sent a message to the doctor to expostulate with him, and demand his reason for such his proceeding. In answer to this, he wrote them a letter to the following purport, that Mr. N , not dying within the j)recincts of the cathedral church, they were under no ob- ligation to bury him in it; but he recommended it to his relations to bury him as the law directed, in the church or churchyard of the parish in which he died, against which there could be no exception: and this his answer tlie doctor chose to send in writing with his name subscribed to it, that it might not be in the power of the messenger, by any addition or alteration of his own, to represent it otherwise than he intended it. On the delivery of this note, a certain knight, who lived near Norwich, and had several times turned Papist and Protestant, forwards and backwards, as either religion was most likely to be uppermost, sit- ting as chairman of the consultation, declared, that there was nothing written in it for which they could make the doctor suffer, and therefore advised them to send to him again in order to provoke him to give another answer; and accord- ingly the brother of the deceased, who had also gone over to popery, was sent on this errand, who coming to the doctor's house demanded of him in an impe- rious manner why he would not let his brother be buried in the cathedral? to which the doctor answered, that he had sent his reasons in writing, which he supposed the other had seen. His reply to this was, that he had seen the writing, but that the reason there given was not sufficient, and he would have another. To this the doctor said, he had no other for him; and so leaving him retired to his study; on which the other went off in great wrath; and tlie con- sult not being able to gain any advantage "against the doctor, followed his advice, and buried the deceased in the church of the parish where he died. At the same time there was another affair, which further exasperated these men against him; for the doctor observing, that the clergy of Norwich were much intimidated, by the severe measures the king took for the propagating of his religion, especially after what had happened to the bishop of London, and Dr. Sharp, dean of Norwich, and that they wholly abstained from meddling W'th this controversy, at a time when there was most need to exert themselves, resolved by his example to encourage them no longer to be silent on so import.apt an occasion, but speak out in defence of the holy religion they professed. Ha'^ing therefore two turns for preaching in the cathedral, the first on Good-Friday, and the other the Sunday seven-night following, he took for his text, the 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, and 28th, verses of the ixth chapter of the Epistle to the He- brews; the words are as follow: " For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the true; but into Heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us. " Nor yet that he should offer himself often, as the high-priest entereth into the holy place every year with the blood of others: " For then must he often have suffered since the foundation of the world; but now once, in the end of the world, hath he appeared, to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. " And as it is appointed for all men once to die, but after this the judgment; " So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and unto them, that look for him, shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation." And from this text he formed both his sermons against the mass-sacrifice of tlie church of Rome, endeavouring to prove, what the 31st article of our church says of them, viz. " that the sacrifices of masses, in which it was commonly said, that the priest did offer Christ for the quick and the dead to have remission of pain and guilt, were blasphemous fables and dangerous deceits." In the last of these two sermons he had these words: " And now I doubt not but that there are some, who will not be a litUe offended with me, for what I have said both in this, and my former discourse on this text; but unto such I have these two things to say: — " First, that we being ministers of Jesus Christ, think ourselves indispensably 12 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. obliged by the law of our_ mission, and the vow we have entered into or: oui taking this holy office upon us, to declare God's truths to aJl those to whrm v/e are sent, and to warn them of those errors, which if they fall into, will enda.i;:^*'! their everlasting salvation. And when any party of men are so unreason-jblo, as to take it ill at our hands for discharging our duty and our consciences herein, we shall say unto them the same, which the apostle did unto the Jews in the like case, Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken to you, more than unto God, judge ye. " But secondly, as Gk)d and our consciences obUge us to the discharge of this duty, so do we take it, that we have full license from the king's most excellent majesty to authorize us so to do; and that not only by his laws, which are tiie most authentic expressions of his will, but also by his late declaration, wherein, out of his abundant clemency, he hath given fuU Hberty to all men in this reahn to own and profess each their own religion, according as their consciences shall direct. — And seeing by virtue of this liberty so many now-a-days do take it upon them to oppose the doctrines of our church, and set up their own errors against them; who can with any reason deny us the benefit of this same liberty to defend ourselves; for since so many make use of the privilege of this liberty now granted to them, not only to preach up their erroneous doctrines against us, but also to hunt after the souls of men from house to house, seeking whom they can devour; without permitting those, whom they think they can have any ad- vantage over, either to live in quiet or die in quiet, in our communion; if we only, amidst this hberty, were to sit still with our hands upon our mouths, and eileiitly b^Iiold those to be daily torn from us, for whose souls we are to answer, if ihey perish through our neglect, our case would of all men be the hardest It can never enter into my thoughts that so just a prince as our present majesty is owned to be, ever designed to put any such thing upon us. ' This declaration is general to all his people, which is demonstration to me, that he intended the benefit of it for ah, that is, as well to those who had the laws on their side, as to tliose who have not. And therefore by virtue of that declaration, as well as the impulse of my own conscience, I have thus taken it upon me to discharge my duty in this particular, and think nothing can be more unreasonable, than that tliose, wjio have no right at aU but by this declaration, should take any excep- tions abit. But be that as it will, since God hath called me to this ministry, I am not ashamed of, neither will I be afraid to preach, the gospel of Jesus Christ." These two sermons having angered the papists, Mr. Acton, the Jesuit, who was chief mass priest of a popish conventicle, then set up in Norwich, at a place formerly made use of as a granary, sent two of his perverted disciples to the doctor, to demand an account of the said sermons; to which he answered, that he knew no obligations he had to be accountable to the men of the granary for what he had preached in the cathedral: if they had a mind to know what he delivered there, they might come and hear him, and that was all the answer he would give them. This expression, ' the men of the granary,' gave great offence, and produced a very angry letter from Mr. Acton, in which among other ex- pressions of his resentment, he told the doctor, "that it was expected the king, ere long, would be at Norwich, when he hoped to see him upon his knees in their oratory; and must he be then called one of the men of the granary too?" This was such foohsh stuff, that the doctor thought it proper, from thence, to despise the man, and take no more notice of him. All these particulars of the doctor's behaviour having made him very obnoxious to the popish party, as they had nothing else to object to him, they challenged him for not answering a letter written by Mr. Acton, which the doctor supposed could be none but the last he received from Mr. N.; for he knew, that all the controversial letters sent to him in his narae. were written by Mr. Acton. Upon Jhis, he gathered together the papers he had formerly written in that controversy; • and in order to let those, who had called upon him for an answer, know that Ae was prepared to give it, sent them to the press, from whence they Avere published THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 13 m the ensuing summer, under the title of The Validity of ike Orders of the Church of England, made out against the objections of the Papists, in several letters to a gentleman of JVorwich, that desired satisfaction therein. After Dr. Prideaux had preached in the cathedral the two si^rmons above mentioned, most of the other ministers in Norwich taking courage from his ex- ample, preached in their respective churches against the errors and impiety of popery. This was an opposition, those of that sect could not bear with any patience, in a cause which now they reckoned as their own; and looking upon all as excited by the doctor's example, resolved to be revenged on him, for this and the other matters, in which he had offended them: and to this end, applied to a popish gentleman of considerable figure in Norfolk, and who had an interest m king James's court, to go thither, and complain of him to the king. But this '^iad no effect; for as they had a design there, to strike at the whole body of ttie Irotestant clergy, it was no longer worth their while, to concern themselves with a particular person apart. And this design was laid in the following manner: the king had about a year before published his declai-ation of indulgence and general toleration to all the 'ifferent sects of Christians in his dominions,, that all might worship God in their own way, and thereby had let the papists into the public exercise of their super- stition in all parts of the kingdom. Now that he might farther and more effectu- ally advance their interest, he took a resolution, and accordingly by his own authority, ordered, that this declaration should be read by the ministers, in all the churches in this realm, during the time of the celebration of divine service, with an intention of ejecting all such, as should refuse to comply with him here- in, from their respective churches, and supplying the vacancies with priests of the church of Rome. This order bore date the 4th of May, 1688, and enjoined the saiJ declaration to be read at the usual time of divine service, on the 20th and 27th of the same month, in all churches and chapels within the cities of London and Westminster, and ten miles round about, and upon the 3d and 10th of June following, in all other churches and chapels throughout the kingdom; and the bishops were thereby commanded to send and distribute the said declara- tion through their several and respective dioceses, to be read accordingly. For which purpose, bundles of the said declaration were sent from the king's print- ing-house to every bishop in the kingdom, according to the number of churches and chapels in their respective dioceses. What followed upon this, how the bishops petitioned the king, were imprisoned for the cause, and brought to their trial, are aU particulars so well known, that they need not be here mentioned. Two or three of the bishops, whose inclinations were in all things to comply with the king's measures, and had been promoted by him for that end, scanda- lously obeyed his order, and sent out this declaration to the clergy of their dioceses, to be read by them in their churches on the days appointed; but all ihe rest refused, and thereby screened their clergy from the blow that was limed at them. However, that they might not be surprised by having this declaration and order obtruded upon them from such other hands as were then busily employed in promoting tlie popish cause, a letter was drawn up by the earl of Halifax, directed to aU the clergy of England, persuading them not to read the declaration. And this carried with it such strength of reason, as convinced every one, who intended to adhere to the Protestant religion, rather to incur the king's dis- pleasure, than obey his orders in this matter. This letter was privately prin to be fiUed up for any that will pay for them; and thus end them to maiket au over their jurisdiction, to be put off, as it happens, to rfuy who want them, without any other examination than of the purse of the purchaser, whether he hath money enough to pay the fees. Thus it comes to pass, that abundance of ruinous matches are constantly contracted under the authority of these illegal hcenses; and the scandal of all faUs upon the church. In the same letter, the doctor takes especial notice of another particular, which is, that whereas the canons of 1603 do more than once enjoin, that all marriages shall be celebrated in the church or chapel, to which one or both of the parties belong, lest the minister might be surprised into the celebrating of an illegal or unfitting marriage, by his not knowing the parties; they take upon themselves the liberty of acting contrary to this rule at their pleasure; and without any regard to the canons which prescribe it, direct their licenses to be executed in any church or chapel within their respective jurisdictions, which the parties or either of them shall desire; and this hath given an opportunity to the bringing about most of the stolen marriages that are complained of, which, had this rule been duly observed, would in aU likelihood have been prevented: for all persons being usually well known in the parishes where they live, especially to the minister, the fraud of such a marriage cannot but be seen and discovered, when it comes to him to be executed; and in consequence, if he be not a very bad man, hindered and prevented by him. On the other hand, places, where the parties are least known, are the properest for acts of fraud and illegality; and such they will never want, as long as chancellors and commissaries take the liberty of granting the licenses above mentioned, and thereby encourage and help forward the iniquity which they are in duty bound to prevent. Dr. Prideaux's advice therefore to the bishop of Bath and WeUs was, that he shoidd endeavour to prevail with his grace the archbishop of Canterbury, and the rest of the bishops, to put the laws in execution, which are already made against clandestine marriages; for better laws cannot be contrived to reform this abuse, than those which are already to be found in our ecclesiastical constitutions for this purpose; and were these laws duly observed, and vigorously prosecuted against aU that violated them, there would be no need of making acts of parlia- ment, or establishing sanguinary laws against the clergy for preventing this iniquity. As to the bill itself. Dr. Prideaux in his letter declared, that'shovdd it pass into an act, it would be, in his opinion, the greatest hardship that ever was put upon the clergy in any Christian state; for it would be a continual snare of ruin and destruction to them, since it would subject them to be tried for their lives every marriage they solemnized. That it would not be a sufficient salvo to say the license would be their security; for who would care to have the safety of his life depend on a slip of paper, which the rats might eat up, or a hundred other acci- dents happen to destroy; and then the minister must suffer death for want of it? And farther, for his part, the doctor declared to the bishop, that after the passing of this bill, whatever should be the consequence, he would never marry any more persons; and was of opinion, that all other ministers, who had any regard for their own safety, would take the same resolution; and then the biU, instead of preventing clandestine marriages, would operate so far as to put a stop to all marriages whatsoever. These considerations, when offered to the house in the debate, were thought to carry such weight with- them, that those * who brought in the l)iU were content to drop it, and pressed it no further. The bishop of Bath and Wells, on his perusal of this letter, forthwith sent it to the press, without Dr. Prideaux's knowledge or consent; and the next week after, to the doctor's great surprise, it came down to him in print. This he would have had great reason to be offended at, had not the bishop spared him so far as not JO put his name to it. • In the same year, 1691, towards the end of the long vacation, died Dr. Ed- 24 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. ward Pocock, the eminent Hebrew Professor at Oxford, in the eighty-eighth yeaj of his age. On his death, Dr. Pridcaux was offered to succeed him in his pro- fessor's place, but dechned it for several reasons, which at that time made it in- convenient to him to accept it, but afterward it proved much to his detriment that he did not. About Whitsunday, A. D. 1692, bishop Moor first came into his diocess, and Dr. Prideaux then attended him as one of his archdeacons for the examining of candidates who offered themselves to be ordained, which afforded him matter of great concern; for he used frequently to lament the excessive ignorance he had met with, in such as offered themselves for holy orders, at their examinations; that men, who were themselves unacquainted with the common doctrines of Chrisiianity, necessary to the salvation of their own souls, should take upon them the sacred office of conducting others to salvation: and this he attributed in a great measure to the neglect of family devotion; for while religion remained in families, and God was daily worshipped, children were early bred up by their parents, and instructed in the knowledge of Him; and the principles of Chris- tianity, thus first instilled into them, continued to grow up with them into further knowledge, as themselves grew to be further capable of it. And whilst young men were thus educated, when any of them were sent to the university, there to be fitted by their studies for the ministry of religion, they carried some knowledge of it thither with them, and thereby became the sooner and more effectually qualified to become teachers of it. But since family devotion and family in- struction, through the causes already mentioned, have been neglected, and thi.s neglect through the corruption of the times has grown so fast, as now in a great measure to have overspread the land, young men frequently come to the uni- versity without any knowledge or tincture of religion at all; and having little op- portunity of improving themselves therein, whilst under-graduates, because the course of their studies inclines them to philosophy and other kinds of learning; they are usually ^.dmitted to their first degree of bachelor of arts, with the same ignorance as to all sacred learning, as when first admitted into the universities; and many of them as soon as they have taken that degree, offering themselves for orders, are too often admitted to be teachers in the church, when they are only fit to be catechumens therein. These considerations made the doctor often lament the loss of Dr. Busby's benefaction, who offered to found two catechistical lectures, one in each university, with an endowment of 100/. per annum each, for instructing the under-graduates in the rudiments of the Christian religion; provided all the said under-graduates should be obliged to attend those lectures, and none of them be admitted to the degree of bachelor of arts, till after having been examined by the catechist, as to their knowledge in the doctrines and pre- cepts of the Christian religion, and by him approved of. But this condition be- ing rejected by both universities, the benefaction was rejected therewith, and the church hath ever since suffered for the want of it. He used likewise to com- plain of another abuse, which he frequently met with at ordinations; that is, false testimonials; for how defective soever any of the candidates may be in their learning, and how faulty and scandalous soever in their manners, they never want ample testimonials, with the full number of neighbouring ministers' hands thereto, vouching the contrary. By this means bishops are often so deceived, as to admit into orders such as are notoriously unworthy of them. This the doctor thought was a scandalous abuse in those ministers, who misguided and imposed on bishops by such false testimonials; for the remedying of which it w^ould be proper, that any minister, who should thus endeavour by unjustifiable means to procure orders for an undeserving person, should "himself be suspended from his own, till he was made sensible of his error; and ever after stand unqualified for giving any more testimony in the like cases. After the act of toleration had passed the royal assent, the first of king Wilhara and queen Mary, many people foolishly imagined that tliey had thereby full liberty given them, either to go to church or stay away, and idly dispose of THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 25 tnemselves elsewhere, as they should think fit; and accordingly, the public as- semblies for divine worship on the Lord's day were much deserted, and ale- houses much more resorted to than the churches. Dr. Prideaux, in order to put a stop to this growing evil, drew up a circular letter, directed to the ministers of his archdeaconry, in which, after he had informed them, that the said act gave no toleration to absent from church, but only to such, who, dissenting from the established religion, worshii)ped God elsewhere, with one of the dissenting sect? mentioned in the said act, and that aU who absented themselves from church and did not thus worship God elsewhere, were under the same penalties of law as before, and ought to be punished accordingly; he desired them to send foi their churchwardens, and having fully instructed them in this matter, exhori them to do their duty herein, and present, at all visitations for the future, aU such profane and irreligious absenters from church, in the same manner as formerly used to be done before this act was made. This circular letter he sent to Lon- don, and having there gotten as many copies of it to be printed as there were parishes in the archdeaconry; on his next visitation, which was Michaelmas, A. D. 1692, dispersed them among the ministers of the said parishes, giving each of them one. It was afterward published at the end of his Directioiis to Church- wardens, and underwent several editions. This letter, he found, had, in some measure, its intended eflect, though it could not wholly cure this evil. On Michaelmas, 1694, he thought proper to leave Saham, and return again with his family to Norwich, after he had resided there about four years. His reasons for leaving this place were, that the country thereabouts subjecting people to agues, his family were hardly ever free from that distemper all the time he lived there. He was himself sick of it a considerable time; and two of his chil- dren were so long ill, and contracted so bad a state of health from it, as afterward cost them both their lives. Besides, being obliged to leave most of his books at Norwich, as. not having room for them in his house at Saham, this hindered him from cariydng on his studies according to his inclinations; and in these he was further interrupted, whilst l|fi tarried there, by the avocations he frequently met witli in country business, which made him weary of the place; and on all these considerations, he determined to leave it. On his quitting Saham, he gave it up altogether, without reselling to himself any of the profits, as he might have done, by putting a curate on the parish; and resolving that as far as in him lay, the benefice and the office should go together, he resigned both into the hands of the bishop, and wrote to the warden and feUows of New-College, in Oxford, who were patrons of the living, to present another, which they did accordingly. On the doctor's return to Norwich, the whole business of the cathedral fell again into his hands, and he was obliged to undertake the burden of it, to pre- vent all from running to confusion. TJie dean resided mostly at London, and hardly ever came to Norwich till towards the latter end of his time; and Dr. Prideaux, after he had left Saham, being constantly there, this gave him a fuU opportunity to make himself master of the affairs of that church; which he con- tinued to take care of till the time of his death. On the 12th of February, A. D. 1696, he was instituted into the vicarage of Trowse, on the presentation of the dean and chapter of Norwich. It is a little village, within a mile of Norwich, and a very small benefice, being hardly worth to him more than -10/. per annum. However, having no cure since he had re- signed Saham, he took this small vicarage, rather for the sake of exercising the duties of his function in that parish, than out of any regard to the small profits arising therefrom: for thougli his prcbendship of Norwich, and archdeaconry of Suffolk, which were all the preferments he had at this time, fell very much short of a sufficiency to support him, yet, as he had private fortunes, of his own, he needed not so small an accession for his maintenance. Having taken upon him- self this cure, he diligently attended it, serving it himself every Sunday for seve- ral years together, till he was disabled by the calamitous distemper of the stone, from going any more into the pulpit, and then resigned it; as will be hereafter Vol. I.— 4 26 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. mentioned, it being his resolution not to keep any cure, which he could not serve himself. In Easter eim, 1697, he published his life of Mahomet, which was so well received in tae world, that three editions of them Avere sold off the first year. He had long designed to write a history of the Saracen Empire, from the begin- ning of it, till it fell into pieces, by the governors of provinces setting up each for themselves, A. D. 936, which wa^ three hundred and foui-teen years from its first rise under Mahomet. By this partition, aU the power and grandeur of it had an end, though its name, with a small territory round Bagdat, continued under the succeeding caliphs some ages after. This history, as it was to have given an account of the rise and progress of this empire, and of the Mahometan rehgion with it; so was it likewise to have comprehended the decay and faU of the Gre- cian empire in the east, and the Christian religion, which sunk with it in those parts; for the power of the one empire being built on the decay and ruins of the other, their histories are necessarily connected, and interwoven with each other. The doctor began his history from the death of Mauritius the Greek emperor, which happened A. D. 60:2, and had gone some way in it, before he went to Saham; but not being able to go on with it there for want of his books, which he had left behind him at Norwich, as was mentioned before, the work stood still some time. However, on his return to Norwich, he resumed it again, with an intention of perfecting it; but whilst he was thus engaged in it, some reasons oc- curred to him, which made him desist from prosecuting it any farther. He came to a resolution therefore to publish only that part of it, which contained the life of Mahomet, and drop all the rest. What the reasons were that induced him to alter his design, being fuUy shown in his preface to that book, there is no need of repeating them here. The doctor found, in his archidiaconal visitations, that the churchwardens of Ins archdeaconry of Suffolk, as in all other archdeaconries, instead of presenting what was amiss, as they are bound by their oaths, at those visitations, usually gave in their presentments as if aU was right, and tMt for those parishes where the contrary was most notorious. This afforded him, as it must every honest and considerate man, matter of melancholy reflection, that three or four hundred men shovdd thus deliberately perjure themselves twice a year. In order therefore to put a stop to this evil, as far as it was in his power, he wrote his directions to churchwardens, instructing them in aU the branches of their duty, which they had sworn to observe, and exhorting and directing them faithfully and carefully to discharge their offices. This tract, as it was written for the use of his arch- deaconry, he immediately dispersed through all the parishes of it, as soon as it came from the press. The first edition bore date December the 20th, 1707, and since that, several other editions have been published: the third, which bore date in September, 1712, is the completest; for this the doctor published, after having revised the two former editions, and made many considerable additions and en- largements. This, therefore, as it came from the author's last hand, and those editions which have since been published from it, I should choose to recommend to such as have occasion for the book. In December, A. D. 170], a convocation being met at London for transacting the affairs of the church, Dr. Prideaux went thither, and took his seat among them as archdeacon of Suffolk. On his arrival, he found them divided into the high- church and low-church parties. The first thing that came under their considera- tion, was the choice of a prolocutor. The high-church party set up Dr. Wood- ward, dean of Salisbury; and the others proposed Dr. Beveridge, archdeacon of Colchester. The former carried the election by a great majority, and took the chair accordingly, in which he conducted himself with candour and abihties much beyond what was expected from him. And now, a debate arose concern- ing the privileges of the lower house, where a majority of the members claimed to be on the same footing, as to the upper house, that the Commons in Parliament are in regard to the House of Lords; that i?, to adjourn by their oa\ti authority, THE AUTHOR'S LIFE, i^ ipart from the upper house, when, and to such time as they shDul(!l think fit. This the upper house, that is, the bishops, would not admit of, but insisted that the ancient usage, which had been all along continued, was, that the president adjourned both houses together, and to the same time; and that this was signified by a schedule sent down to the lower house; and that this practice they would abide by, and allow of no other; and so far Dr. Prideaux concurred with them, as thinking them in the right. But as to their requiring, that the lower house should break up, as soon as the schedule come down to them, and appoint no committees to sit and act on the intermediate days, he was clearly of opinion, that in both these particulars they were wholly in the wrong; for as the bishops usually break up very early, to attend the service of the House of Lords in Par- liament, and then send down the schedule of adjournment to the lower house, if on the receipt of this schedule the loAver house must immediately break up also, what time could they have to despatch the business before them? It seems natural from the reason of the thing, that the day of sessions be allotted for the business of it; and if so, what leisure can there be, unless on intermediate days, for any committee to sit and do the business referred to them? Two months of this meeting were taken up in arguing and debating these matters, which were contested Avith a great deal of heat on both sides, as well without doors (where 'there was abundance of pamphlets printed about them) as within the house. At length the lower house appointed a committee to consider of some method for accommodating and ending this dispute, that so they might be able to proceed in the other business for which they were called. Dr. Prideaux was one of this committee, who sat some time; but before any report could be made, the prolo- cutor fell ill and died: upon which, there arose a new debate about appointing his successor; but this did not last long; for within a few days after, on the 8th of March, 1701, king William died, which put an end to the convocation. On the 10th of May following, A. D. 1702, died Dr. Henry Fairfax, dean of Norwich, in the G8th year of his age, after having held that deanery upwards of eleven years; and Dr. Prideaux being appointed to succeed him, was installed into his deanery the 8th of June following. As soon as he was settled herein, he set himself to work, in reforming such disorders and abuses as were crept into the cathedral, which he had no other means of doing, than by purging it of several obnoxious and scandalous persons who were the occasion of those disorders, and filling up the vacancies with the best men he could get. This he did; and by admonishing the rest, at length brought the whole choir into perfect good order; and so it continued for several years to the time of his death. The 3d of December, A. D. 1702, being appointed a public thanksgiving-day, on account of our success in the expedition against Vigo, in Spain, dean Pri- deaux preached the thanksgiving sermon, at the cathedral church of Norwich, and, by desire of the mayor and aldermen of the city, had it printed. This was the only sermon he ever published; and had he followed his own inclinations, it would have been one of the last of all he had preached from that pulpit, which he had chosen for that purpose: for, according to the general turn of such sermons, it contained little moj-e than an harangue on the occasion of the day. However, after it had been once published, the booksellers thought proper to reprint it, at the end of his Ecclesiastical Tracts printed at London, A. D. 1716. In Easter term following, A. D. 1703, he published a tract in vindication of the present established law, which gives the successor in any ecclesiastical benefice or promotion, all the profits from the day of the avoidance. The occa- sion of his writing this tract was as follows: As the law noAV stands, if a beneficed clergj-man dies a little before harvest, his successor shall go away with all the profits; and by this means, often leaves the family of his predecessor in great poverty and distress for the want of them. This was by many thought a ^ery hard case, and several of the clergy clamoured hard for a new law to lemedy it; which induced some of the bishops to think of bringing a bill into parliament 28 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. for this purpose; and the bishop of Salisbury, Dr. Burnet, being particularly zealous in this matter, undertook to draw the bill. Dr. Prideaux hearing of this, set himself to examine into the case; and after having considered it, wrote this tract about it; in which, as his sentiments happened to concur with those of the archbishop of Canterbury, the archbishop recommended it to the rest of the bishops, who, on perusing it, were so far convinced, that all in general consented to drop it, and there have never since been any thoughts of reviving it. This piece was likewise reprinted with his Ecclesiastical Tracts. In the beginning of the year 1705, the dean had a very signal deliverance from great danger. Dr. Hayley, late dean of Chichester, being then in the neighbourhood of Norwich, dean Prideaux went over to make him a visit; and while he was there, the servants of the house (without the knowledge or privity of their master) made his coachman so drunk, that, on his return, he feU off the coach-box; and upon his falling, the horses immediately took fright, and ran away with him near three miles full speed, till at length they were accidentally stopped by a poor labouring man returning from his work: and happily the dean received no harm. This was a deliverance which he was ever after very thank- ful to Gotl for, whilst he Uved. And there were two circumstances, which seemed providentially to concur in saving him: the first was, that on his return, instead of driving the direct road, through which he went, he ordered his coach- man to iurn to the right-hand into another road, which led to a farther part of the city, where some business called him. Now this rgad being smooth and plain, there was less danger from an accident of this sort; whereas had he gone the other road, which was the nearest way to his own hgrne, there was a steep precipice in it over which the horses would in all probability have fallen, and beat the coach in pieces, and destroyed him. The second was, that a little while before this happened, being in company with some of his friends, the case of bishop Grove, who lost his hfe by an accident of the like kind, was talked of; and it was then made apparent to him that the safest way in such a case would be to sit stiU, and wait the event of an overthrov/, or the stopping of the horses by some other means. And had he not been thus forewarned, he had certainly endeavoured to have leaped out of the coach, which, in all probability, must have been fatal to him; for whilst the horses were running full speed, it was hardly possible for him to have been so quick in getting out, but the hinder wheel would have caught him in the attempt, and overrun him to his destruction. And this was the ruin of bishop Grove, who, whilst the horses were running away with him, endeavoured to leap out; but the hinder wheel of the coach over- took him, ran over him, and broke his leg, of which he died. Both these circumstances the dean ever after looked on as instances of God's mercy, provi- dentially operating to his deliverance, and, as long as he lived, was thankful for them. The maintenance of the parochial clergy of Norwich, depending mostly upon voluntary contributions, gathered from door to door in every parish, in the year 1706, it was endeavoured to bring it to a certainty, by act of parhament; and in order to this, a petition from the city being necessary, the mayor, aldermen, and common-council, were solicited to make this petition. While this was in agita- tion, for the furthering the success of so good a design. Dr. Prideaux published an award made by King Charles the First, and passed under his broad seal for the settling of two shillings in the pound, out of the rents of all grounds, build- ings, and edifices, within the said city of Norwich, for the said parochial clergy, to which he annexed a discourse in vindication of the legality, justice, and reasona- blenesii of that award; and in this treated particularly of the nature and legality of personal tithes, and the manner of paying them in the city of London; and though this treatise did not at that time answer the end for which it was intended, and produce the desired effect; yet, as he was in hopes it might some time or other be of use for that purpose, he had it reprinted again among his Ecclesias- tical Tracts, A. D. 171G. TPIE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 29 In the year 1707, the bishopric of Ely falling void by the death of bishop Patrick. Dr. Moor, bishop of Norwich, was translated thither; and Dr. Charleg Trimnell, one of the prebendaries of Norwich, was promoted to the see of Norwich. From the translation of bishop Moor to the naming his successor, near half a year intervened; and during this time, the dean had many letters sent him by his friends, advising and encouraging him to make interest for the bishopric: but this he could by no means be persuaded to do, nor did he think it consistent with his interest to accept of it, in case it had been offered him; for he was then near sixty years of age; and as the revenues of his deanery and archdeaconry would better support him in his present situation, than those of the bishopric in the situation of a bishop, he thought it better to continue as he was; especially as the coming into that bishopric in first-fruits, fees, providing a suita- ble equipage, furnishing his house, and other incidental expenses, could not cost him less than ilOOHl. all of which he must save again out of the bishopric, or his family suffer by his promotion. There have been frequent instarices of bishops, who dying too soon after their promotion, have left their families in such poverty, as to want charity for their necessary subsistence. This was the case of bishop W — k, and this was the case of bishop G — ve, and would have been the case of archbishop T — n, had not his widow been assisted after his death by a pension from the crown, and what she got of the booksellers for his posthumous sermons. Dr. Prideaux indeed was in no danger of leaving his family in such distress, as he had a temporal estate sufficient to provide for them whenever he should hajipen to die; but then as he had got nothing by the church, he had no reason to hazard his private fortunes (which were his own, and his wife's inheri- tance) in the service of it. It is a hard case, it must be owned, on the clergy, that when they are called to bishoprics, they should be so eaten out with the payments of first-fruits and fee§, before they can receive any benefit from their preferment: and it were much to be wished, that when the parliament discharged all small livings not exceeding 50/. per annum, of all tenths and first-fruits, they );ad also discharged all poor bishoprics of the same payments, that is, all not exceeding iOOO/. per annum, considering their attendance at parliament, and other expenses in their way of living, that are necessarily annexed to their office. And it would be much easier, if instead of the mock elections of bishops by Conge d' elire, and the operose way of suing out so many instruments, and goiag through so many offices, and their paying so many fees for them, in order to their full settlements in their preferments, bishops were made here in the same manner as they are in Ireland, by the king's letters patent, in which case, there would be nothing farther necessary, than those letters patent, presenting them to the benefice, as in the case of all other ecclesiastical benefices in the king's gift, and his mandate to the archbishop to consecrate, institute, and install them. By these means, a great deal of trouble and expense would be saved, and deans and chapters delivered froirf the great danger of a Prccmunire, which they are liable to in all such elections, if they do not within twenty days, return elected the person whom the king, in his letters missive, nominates to them. These alterations would make such promotions much more desirable, than they now are, to many who well deserve them. But that, which made the dean most averse to pursuing any measures for obtaining the bishopric, and weighed most with him, was, that he was very easy in his deanery, which he could not pro- mise himself he should be in a bishopric. In the former, his long experience had made him perfect master of all the business of the cathedral church, which he comprehended in its full extent; but had reason to fear, he should not be able to do the same in the latter, especially since now attending the court and parha- ment, and afluirs of state, are made so much the business of a bishop, which he knew himself to be wholly unacquainted with. Instead therefore of making any interest for himself on this occasion, he engaged all that he had for Dr Trimnell, as he had lived a long while in friendship with him, and knew him to be a person of great worth and goodness, and every way deserving Hie prefer- m THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. ment he then aimed at; which the diocess of Norwich afterward fully experienced to their great satisfaction. In the year 1709, he pubhshed his tract Of the Original Right of Tithes. His design at first was, to give the History of Appropriations; that is, to show by what means they begun, how they were alienated into lay-hands at the reforma- tion, the right the church still hath to them, for serving the cure, repairing the chancel, and bearing all other ecclesiastical burdens, the right, which the law hath now given appropriators in them, and what are usui-pations made there- upon. This was his main design; and the treating of the original right of tithes was intended no otherwise than as a preface to this work. But when he came to write it, finding it swell to a bulk, beyond what he had expected, he thought it best to publish this separately, and reserve the rest for a second work, having already made collections for that pui-pose. Whilst he was engaged in this un- dertaking, the unhappy distemper of the stone fiM seized him, which put a stop to all further proceedings: for in order to complete the work, and make it fully answer the end intended, it was necessary for him to consult the Cotton Library, the tower of London, and other places, where ancient records are kept, which he could not do, but by taking a journey to those places, and being vitterly disabled from bearing any such journey by his distemper, he was obHged to lay aside the whole design. At the end of this treatise on tithes, he published the bill, which he had drawn for remedying the inconveniences the church suffers, from the holding pluralities of benefices, with cure of souls; his reasons for this, as well as the occasion of his writing this tract, have been mentioned above. In the year 1710, being disabled by the stone from going any more into the pulpit, he resigned his vicarage of Trowse; and the chapter, who had the patron- age of it, gave it to one of their minor canons. When this distemper first came upon him in the spring of the former year, he apprehended it was the stone "in the kidney, from whence, with much pain, it passed into the bladder, and when there, as he imagined, adhered to the side of it; for upon his taking a short journey into the country, it was broke off by the .shaking of the coach, which occasioned his voiding a great quantity of blood; and from that time he lived in constant pain, till he was cut for it, two years after. His reasons for delaying this so long were, that being now past sixty, he was ap- prehensive it Avould be impossible for him to go through the operation, without certain death to him; and under such circumstances to put himself into the sur- geon's hands, would be little better than self-murder; and rather than be guilty of this, he was determined to submit to the will of God, and patiently endure his calamity, however grievous and tormenting to him. This he did for two years together, suffering all that time extreme torment with great patience. At last, the disorder grew upon him so much, that there was little probability of his living a month longer without some relief, and cutting being the only means which gave him any prospect of this, he was convinced, that in this case, he might ven- ture to run the hazard of it. He sent therefore for Mr. Salter, a famous lithoto- mist then in London, to perform the operation, which he did with great dexterity, drawing out the stone, which was nearly of the shape and size of a sheep's kid- ney, in less than three minutes time. After the operation, Mr. Salter stayed with him about a week; and in this time the wound healed so fast, and every thing looked so Avell, as to promise a certain cure in a month or six weeks time. Upon this Mr. Salter returned to London, leaving him in the hands of a young surgeon, who had been bred up under himself, then at Norwich, to finish the cure, and assured the dean, he Avould be as safe in his hands as in his owm. But every thing fell out just the contrary; for after he had been under the care of this surgeon a whole year, he seemed to be much farther from a cure than when he had first undertaken him; and during all this time the dean had suffered as much pain and torment from him, as he had before from the stone itself. Whilst he was in this condition, lord Somers hearing of his case, was pleased to express THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. gj himself, that he thought Dr. Prideaux a person of greater value than to be so lost; and sent a message to Mr. Salter, reprimanding him for having taken so little care of him. This produced a letter from Mr. Salter to the dean, in which he earnestly advised and desired him to come to London to him; and accordingly the dean, finding no assistance to be had where he was, resolved on this journey; and for the convenience of his travelling, contrived to take out aU the seats of a large stage-coach, in which he laid his quilt and other bed-clothes, and lying thereon at his fuU length, was carried to London with as much ease and safety as if he had been in a litter. When Mr. Salter came to him, and examined into his case, he found the urinary passage ripped up and destroyed, and every thing so miserably mangled and w'ounded, that he expressed no little wonder to find him alive after usage, which he thought w'ould have killed any body else. No- thing now remained but to cure these wounds, which he did in about two months time, when the dean returned to Norwich again; but was ever after this, obhged to void his urine through an orifice, left in the place where the stone had been extracted, which was a great inconvenience to him all his life after. On his return to Norwich, he again applied himself to his studies, which had been greatly interrupted by his unhappy distemper. The first thing he under- took after this, was to review his Directions to Churchwardens^ upon the bookseller signifying to him, that he intended to print a third edition of that tract; and hav- ing made large additions to it, a third edition was printed and published in Mi- chaelmas term, 1712. Having finished this work, he went on with his Connexion of the History of the Old a7id JVew Testaments, W'hich he had begun immediately upon his dropping the design of writing The History of Jlppropriations; but being interrupted by his dis- order growing upon him, was obliged to lay it quite aside, till God should give him better health to enable him to proceed in it; and having now, by his mercy, in some measure obtained this, he pursued his intention, and finished the first part in the year 1715, which w^as published in Michaelmas term following. The second part came out two years after in Hilary term, 1717-18. This work, at the end of the year 1720, had undergone eight editions in London, besides Iavo or three printed at Dublin.' Little need be said of a book which is so generally well known, and has been read by most persons of all ages, who delight in read- ing at all, as affording abundant matter for the instruction as well as entertain- ment of all sorts of persons. In a work of this kind, which is so extensive in its own nature, and collected from such variety of authors of different nations, ages, and languages, who so often contradict one another, where they speak of the same facts and persons, and sometimes themselves, it is not to be wondered at, if there are some mistakes; but much more so, that so few of these have hitherto been observed by the learned. The following letters, which were written in an- swer to some observations of this kind, sent him by his learned and ingenious friend and kinsman, Walter Moyle, Esq. will sufficiently testify, Avith what can- dour he treated such as differed from his opinions, and how ready he was to re- examine and correct any thing that was thought amiss. DR. PRIDEAUX'S FIRST LETTER TO MR. MOYLE." " Bear Cousin, I thank you for your kind letter, and the pains you have taken about my book. I should have been glad of so learned a friend near me, to whom I might have communicated this history before it was printed. But now three editions being published of it, your observations come toolate to be of any use for the correcting of any thing that is mistaken. However,' I should be glad to have all that you have observed; and if I live to see a fourth edition, I shaU be sure to examine all that you shall suggest to be amiss; and as I shall see cause, for it, make corrections accordingly. " As to your first observation, concerning the East India trade, I perceive, my 1 It has likewise been translated into the French anil Italian anguages. 2 Viilc Moyle's Works, printed at London, 1726, vol. ii. 32 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. good cousiri has not observed, that all that I say of it, is of the trade by sea, and not of the 'trade by land. I thought no reader would have understood it other- wise; but since you have, I shall in the second part, where I shall have occasion to speak of this matter again, put in such words, as shall prevent all misunder- standing of this matter. "As to what you wrote of Zoroastres, I am of nothing more sure in ancient Estory, than that he was never king of Bactria, or any other than a juggling im- postor; . and that the time of his flourishing was in the time of Darius Hystaspes: and all the Greeks, that say any thing to the purpose, agree in this time. For his being king of Bactria, and his making war with Ninus, there is no authority but that of Justin's, and those who have wrote from him. AU the Greeks speak otherwise of him, and some give him a very fabulous antiquity. But since you desire only to have it proved to you, that he was not ancienter than the time of Darius Hystaspes, I will send you no farther, than to the place in the poem to Diogenes Laertius, which I have quoted: there the successors of Zoroastres being named, Ostanes is reckoned the first of them, and he came into Greece with Xerxes. Suidas calls him mfa-o/^vij^;; but there were no Persomedians before Cyrus united Media and Persia together. Suidas, I confess, is no old author, but his collection is made out of those that were so; and many of those he used are now lost. That he is made contemporary with Pythagoras, is another reason for the same thing. That passage, which you refer to in Arnobius, if it proves any thing, it proves him to be contemporary with Cyrus. And Apuleius, placing him in the time of Cambyses, sufficiently shows that there was then an opinion, that he lived about that time: and putting all this together, I think it is not to be doubted, but that when others call Zabratus, Zaratus, Zaras, Zaroes, Nazaratus, &c. is the same with Zoroastres, the character of the person, as weU as the simili- tude of the names, proving this opinion. Perchance Poi-phyrius might think Zabratus and Zoroastres to be two different persons; but this doth not prove them so, Porphyry living many hundreds of years after. AU that I aim to prove by these testimonies is, that the best evidence we have from among the Greeks and Latins for the time of Zoroastres, placeth him about the time where I have put him. But as to the exact chronology of aU his actions, (which is not to be found in this or any other matter among the ancient Greeks) I acknowledge I foUow the eastern writers, whose books are all full of him, and that not from oraltradi- tion, as you suppose, but ancient authors. The Arabs indeed had no learning till after the time of Mahomet; but the Persians had; and from very ancient times. And therefore I believe no Arab author as to this matter any farther than he writes from the Persians; and if the Persians have writings of this matter of above two thousand years standing, why should not they be believed as well as Herodotus or Thucydides? Zoroastres's own books are stiU extant among the Magians in Persia and India; and from them are all the accounts that in the East are given of him. And his books being of the same sacred regard among them as the Alcoran is among the Mahometans, it is not hard to conceive they shoidd be preserved with the same care. As to Texeita, it is not a translation, but a short abstract of Emir Conda's Persian History; that history is ten times as big. And though that author should say nothing of Zoroastres, or Zerdusht, as they call him, this would not prove there was no such person, any more than if the contested passage in Josephus was given up concerning our Saviour, it would prove that there was no such person as Jesus Christ, because then there would be no mention of him in that history. If there be no mention of Zerdusht in Emir Conda, a good reason may be given for it. Emir Conda was a Persian Mahometan, ai^d with them nothing can be in greater contempt than the Magians are in Persia; and that might be cause enough for him not to take notice, either of them or their prophet. "I beg your pardon, I have not time to go over all ycur papers; others, as ?:ell as you, call for the second part of my history; and being now in the last scene of my life, and almost at the end of that, I have little time to spare from THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 33 mis work; which for the gratifying of you and others, I would gladly finish before I die; but if I live to finish it, and another edition should be published of the first part, I will then thoroughly examine all that you shall offer, but think my opinion, as to the time of Zorastres, to be too well founded ever to be altered by me. I am, &c." Norwich, Oct. 14, 171 J. SECOND LETTER. ''Dear Cousin, I have received more of your papers: to answer fully all that you object, would require a volume, which I have not time or strength to do, being almost worn out by infirmity, caused by the calamity I have suffered, and my advanced age, as being now just upon the seventieth year of my hfe. This h-^th so far broken me, as to confine me wholly to my house, and mostly to my chamber. Only since you press particularly about the 'Av:^?^^.?, my answer is, that Xenophon was not the author of that book, but Themistogenes of Syracuse. This Xenophon himself says, in the beginning of the third book of his Hellenics. If you please to consult Usher's Annals, sub Anno, J. P. 4p313, you will find this there more fully made out. I have indeed quoted that book under the name of Xenophon, because of the common opinion, which every where attributes it to him; but I think the truth is otherwise. I perceive you hang much upon the matter of Zoroastres: but all that you object is built upon mistakes: if you do not place him where I have, where else wiU you place him? WiU you put him with Plutarch five thousand years before the wars of Troy; or with others six thousand years before the time of Plato? Others indeed reduced the thousands to hundreds; but all is fable, for the ancients much affected a fabulous antiquity for all they relate. They who put things latest are generally nearest the truth. It is easy in all such matters to make objections for pulling down; but then you ought to build up better in their stead. I write with a paralytical hand, which makes writing difficult to me; for which I also need your pardon. I am, &c." Norwich, Jan. 30, 1717. THIRD LETTER. "Dear Cousin, Though my hand be almost past writing, as you will sufficiently see by this letter, yet 1 cannot omit thanking you for the kindness of your last. I hope ere this you have received my book. I am sure it wiU nowhere find a more observing and judicious reader than yourself. I had sufficient experience of this in your learned remarks on the former part. They have instructed me for the making some alterations against another edition; but however, I cannot recede from placing the Zoroastres, who was Zerdusht of the Persians, and the author of the book Zundavestow, (which is the Bible of the Magians) in that very age where my book has placed him. To say otherwise would be to contra- dict all the ancient histories of the Persians, and the general tradition of all the East. What you object out of Xantkus Lydius, who lived in that very age in which I place Zoroastres, looks like an unanswerable argument, it being by no means likely, that this author should assert Zoroastres to have lived six hundrei? years before the expedition of Xerxes, if he was his contemporary. One answei hereto is, the history that in the time of Diogenes Laertius went under the name of Xantkus Lijdias, was none of his, but written by Dyonysius Scytobrachion, who lived a little before the time of Tully and Julius Cajsar. This Athcnsus teUs us, lib. XII. and quotes for it Artemon Cassandreus, who wrote a treatise on purpose to make a distinction of the genuine authors from the spurious, which were then extant. But I am rather apt to think with PUny, (lib. XXX. c. L) that there were two Zoroastres, the elder of which was the founder of the Magian sect, and the other the reformer; and that this latter was the Zerdusht of the Persians, and lived in the time where I have placed him. Pliny, in the chapter Vol. I.— 5 34 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. last quoted, tells us of a Zoioastres, who lived but a little before (pauIo ante hunc, are his words,) that Ostanes, Avho came with Xerxes into Greece. Plato, in the tenth book of his Politics, spoke of a Zoroastres, who was Herus Armenius, a Pamphylian. This same was the Armenius Pamphilus, who, Arnobius tells us, was famiUarly acquainted with Cyrus, (See Clem. Mex. Strom. V. p. 436, Edit. Hins. Aryiob. lib. I. p. 31.) I acknowledge the passage in .Arnobius is very dark; but if it signifies any thing, it must signify thus much, that there was a Zoroastres, who lived in the time of Cyrus. I may add hereto, that the antiquity, which most of the ancients among the Greeks and Latins attribute to Zoroastres, is notoriously fabulous, as that of five thousand years before the wars of Troy, and another of six thousand years before the times of Plato, &c. In most pretences to antiquity, it may go for a general rule, that they who say the latest say the truest. As to your other objection against Alexander's having been at Jerusalem, the place you refer to in Pliny, manifestly makes against you; for the words there plainly prove that Alexander was then at Jericho, when that incision was made in the balsam-trees, which he makes mention of; otherwise these words, Alexandra Magno res ibi gerente, would be very impertinently inserted; and if he were at Jericho, he could not go from thence to Gaza, without taking Jerusa- lem in his way. The words in Pliny to me plainly imply that Alexander was at Jericho when that incision was made, and that it was made at that time for his sake, to gather some of the balsam. That an extraordinary providence has always attended that people for their preservation is manifest. That they are now in being, is a sufficient proof hereof. I am, &c." Norwich, July 10, 1718. FOURTH LETTER. " Dear Cousin, I do most heartily thank you for your kind letter, especially for the observations which you have sent me of my mistakes in the last part of my history. I must confess, that about Octavius's posterity is a very great one. It is a downright blunder of my old head; and I am glad so accurate and learned a reader has not observed more of them. This makes me hope that no more such have escaped me. I have mended this and all the others you have taken notice of; only I cannot make Socrates a sodomite. The place in Juvenal, which you mention, reflects on him for his affection to Alcibiades, as if that were a sodomiti- cal amour. I am past labouring any further, being now past the seventieth year of my age; if I outlive the ensuing winter, it is more than I expect, or indeed desire; for I have now upon me those decays both of body and mind, as make me fully sensible, Gravis est et dura senedus. Every body cannot live so long as my aunt M. M. though perchance I might have lived much longer, and in fuU vigour, had not my great calamity come athwart me: considering that, it is much that I have lasted so long. I bless God for all his mercies hitherto. I am, dear cousin, &c." Norwich, Sept. 6, 1718. The learned and ingenious Mr. Warburton has likewise differed from Dr. Pn- deaux as to the age of Zoroastres, in his Demonstration of the Divine Legation of Moses. In Hilary term, A. D. 1717, lie published the Second Part of the Connexion of the History of the Old and JVew Testaments, and dedicated this part, as he had done the former, to the earl of Nottingham, in acknowledgment of the favours he had received from that nobleman. This history was the last work he finished for the pubUc; for he being now past his seventieth year, he found infirmities grow very fast upon him; and these were hastened on by what he had suffered in being cut for the stone and the ill management he had afterward fallen under About this time he was seized THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 35 With a paralytical shaking in his left hand, which six years after seized his right also, and at length weakened it to that degree, that he could no longer hold a pen to write with; and as these weaknesses of body crept on him, they much impaired and weakened the vigour of his mind, so that he could no longer carry on his studies with his usual strength and assiduity, which made him think it time to give over, as one superannuated for any further undertaking; and therefore, though he had other works in design, and for some of them had materials in a great measure in readiness for the composure, he thought it properest to drop them all, as not expecting he should live long enough to finish whatever he should begin; and that, if he did finish any thing under tliese decays and infirmities, it would be hable to great errors; and he did not think it proper either to hazard his own character, or aflront the public so far as to offer any thing of this kind. And therefore for the remaining part of his life, he was resolved to send nothing more to the press, but confined himself solely to the duties of the station to which he was called; and faithfully to discharge these, and bear the burden of his infirmities, was work enough for him during the latter part of his life. For some time after the publication of his Connexion of ihe History of the Old andJVew Testaments, seldom a week passed without his receiving letters with re- marks and observations upon it from the learned, in different parts of the king- dom; some raising difficulties, others desiring information as to the explaining some difficult passages in it. To all these he constantly returned answers, and gave the best satisfaction he could, till by his age and other infirmities he became incapable of bending his mind to any matter of difficulty. Of all those who made objections or remarks, there was no one who did it with more learning or strength of argument than his worthy kinsman, Walter Moyle, Esq. of Bake, in the county of Cornwall, who has been mentioned above. This gentleman, for his great learning, judgment, and wit, mixed with uncommon humanity and sweetness of temper, was justly esteemed by every one who had the happiness of being acquainted with him. In the younger part of his life, he had served in parliament several years during the reign of king William, where he made a considerable figure by his great knowledge and learning, much beyond what could be expected at his years. Afterw^ard he retired into the country, and lived at his seat in Cornwall upwards of twenty years before he died, where he collected together a well-chosen library of books, and among these spent the re- mainder of his life. He was one of those persons, who, unhappily for the learned world, had no opinion of his own writings; and therefore not long before he died, destroyed most of his finished performances. He died on the 9th of June, A. D. 1721, in the forty-ninth year of his age. From the year 1686, to the time of his death, Dr. Prideaux constantly resided at the cathedral, of which he was a member, excepting only the four years that he hved at Saham. How he employed himself there, appears sufficiently from what has been said above. During all the time that he was dean, he never had the least difference with the chapter, or any of the members of it, which other deans, his predecessors, were hardly ever free from. This was owing to the prudence and integrity of his conduct towards them; for he always treated the prebendaries with all the respect that was due to them, and Avas as careful of their rights as of his own; and never took upon him to determine any thing of the common right and interest of the church, without the common consent and advice of the chapter. In all his transactions with them he never hid or con- cealed any thing from, but constantly laid all their affairs openly and fairly be- fore them, as having no views or by-ends of his own to serve; and this was a method of proceeding, which that church had not always been used to, and so far gained him their confidence and esteem, that they trusted aU their affairs in his hands, without any reserve, as having never found themselves deceived by his management. His residing constantly at the cathedral gave him an oppor- tunity of looking after the fabric of the church, and seeing that it was kept in good repair: and this he took care of as well before as after he was dean; for. 36 THE AUTHOR'S LIFEL while he was })rebendary, he was generally treasurer; and to repair the church was one main part of his office. His method was according to the direction of the local statutes, to order the church every Lady-day to be carefully reviewed by able workmen, and, if any decays were found, he took care to have them re- paired by the Michaelmas following, unless they were so gi-eat, as to exceed wha\ the revenues of the church could bear; and then, what could not be done in one year was done in two. And, had he not been thus careful one year particularly, and put the spire, which is a beautiful edifice, in thorough good repair, it would in all probability have been blown down by a great storm, which happened very soon after he had caused it to be repaired, and must, in falling, have crushed and ruined a great part of the church. In the seventy-fourth year of his age, finding himself so much weakened by his infirmities growing upon him, that he could no longer use his books as formerly, and being desirous that his collection of oriental books should not be dispersed, but kept altogether in some public library, he permitted his son, who had been educated at that college, to make a present of them to the society of Clare-hall, in Cambridge; and accordingly they were sent thither, and placed in the college library, to the number of three hundred volumes and upwards. About a year before his death he was taken with an iUness, which so far re duced him as to confine him wholly to his chamber; and at last his infirmities increased to such a degree, as rendered him incapable of helping himself in the common offices of life. AU this was the effect of the ill conduct he fell undei after his being cut for the stone; for the long confinement he then underwent, and the loss of blood he sustained, weakened him so much in the limbs, that ht was never free from paralytical shaking and rheumatic pains; so that he gavr himself up to the thoughts of death, expecting it with that cheerfulness and re- signation, which naturally flow from the reflection on a life well spent. He ex pired on Sunday evening, the first of November, A. D. 17*24, in the seventy seventh year of his age, after an illness of about ten days, and was buried, ac- cording to his own direction, in tlie cathedral of Norwich, on the Wednesday following. Thus much has been said of his life and conversation in general; as the readei may possibly be desirous of a more particular insight into his character and man- ner of life, the following account is taken from the report of those who knew him best, and conversed with him most intimately. Dr. Prideaux was naturally of a very strong, robust constitution, which enabled him to pursue his studies with great assiduity: and notwithstanding his close ap- plication, and sedentary manner of life, enjoyed great vigour both of body and mind for many years together, till he was seized with the unhappy distemper of the stone. His parts were A^ery good, rather solid than Uvely: his judgment ex- cellent. As a writer, he was clear, strong, and intelligent, without any pomp of language, or ostentation of eloquence. His conversation was a good deal of the same kind, learned and instructive, with a conciseness of expression on many occasions, which to those, who were not AveU acquainted with him, had some- times the appearance of rusticity. In his manner of life, he was very regular and temperate, being seldom out of his bed after ten at night, and generally rose to his studies before five in the morning. His manners were sincere and candid. He generally spoke his mind with freedom and boldness, and was not easily di- verted from pursuing what he thought right. In his friendships he was constant and invariable; to his family he was an affectionate husband, a tender and care- ful father, and greatly esteemed by his friends and relations, as he was very ser- viceable to them on all occasions. As a clergyman, he was strict and punctual in the performance of all the duties of his functions himself, and carefully exacted the same from the inferior clergy and canons of his church. In party matters, so far as he was concerned, he always showed himself firmly attached to the interest of the Protestant cause, and principles of the revolution; but without 'oining in with the violence of parties, or promoting those factions and divisions, THL AUTHOR'S LIFE. 37 which prevailed both in the church and state, during the greater part of his life, His integrity and moderation, which should have recommended him to some of the higher stations in the church, \vere manifestly the occasion of his being neglected; for busy party-zealots, and men more conversant in the arts of a court, were easily preferred over him, whose highest, and only ambition was, carefully to perform what was incumbent on him in every station in Ufe, and to acquit himself of his duty to his God, his friends, and his country. A LETTER FROM THE BISHOP OF WORCESTER, TO THE BISHOP OF NORWICH. Dr. WiUiam Llo3^d,^ the most worthy and learned lord bishop of Worcester, having, through the hands of Dr. Trimnell, bishop of Norwich, communicated to Dr. Prideaux, dean of Norwich, his scheme of the seventy weeks of Daniel, and his solution of them; Dr. Prideaux, in a letter writ thereon to the bishop of Norwich, objected against it, that there were many things in the book of Nehe- miah, which the said scheme of Daniel's weeks is inconsistent with; which being communicated to the said bishop of Worcester, his lordship writ thereon to the said bishop of Norwich this following letter: — Hartlebury, June 21, 1710. My very good Lord, In that part which you gave me of my most learned friend, Dr. Prideaux' s letter to your lordship, he speaks of many things in the book of Nehemiah, with which my account of Daniel's weeks is inconsistent in his opinion. But he mentions not many things, only two or three in his letter; and these are such, as, I conceive, I need not trouble my head with; for they signify nothing to my business, which is only to show, that, from the going forth of the commandment to build Jerusalem again, to the death of Christ, the cutting oiF the Messiah, there should be seven weeks, and sixty-two weeks; seven weeks, that is 49 years, to the end of the vision and prophecy, (Dan. ix. 24.) that is, till the book of Malachi was written; and the other sixty-two weeks, or 434 years till the anointing of the most holy, (ib.) that is, till Christ's being anointed high- priest, with the blood of his own sacrifice, as he was at the time of his death, when the Messias was cut off, (v. 26.) upon which the Jews came to be, i. e. non ei, as it followeth. The Jews, whom Daniel every' where in his prayer calls thy people, God's people, &c. here the angel, speaking from God, throws back upon Daniel, and calls them thy j^eople, that is, Daniel's people, (v. 23, 24.) and in these words (v. 26.) the angel shows how they would cease to be God's people: it was upon the Messias being cut oft', which was done even by themselves; and, after that, they were therefore not his people. But who were to be his people, after this? Even the Romans. They are here called Prindpis populus futurns. Even they, that were to burn the city and temple, i. e. the Romans. I am gone beyond what I needed to have written on this occasion. My business was only to show, from the going forth of the commandment for the building of the city of Jerusalem, till the cutting off the Messias; and thereupon, the Jews being no more his people, was to be seven weeks, and sixty-two weeks; in the whole sixty-nine weeks, or 483 years. I do here take it for granted, that Daniel's years were just 360 days in a year, such as those king Crresus reckoned by, as it appears in Herodotus (1. 28.) Of this, I believe, Mr. Dean needs no proof; but if he pleases, I will send him so much, as, I am sure, will be sufficient. Now, 483 times 3(50 days makes the sum of 173,880 days, which number of days, beginning in the month of Nisan, in the 20th of Artaxcrxes Longinianus, (Neh. ii. ] , 6.) that is, in the year 445, before Christ, about the end of April, will certainly end about May, A. D. 32. But that time was afler the passovcr, for » See the General Diction, vol. vii, &:c. p. 132— HI. Art. JV. Lloyd.— Dr. Prideaux's 4to. Pamphlets, No. 13 38 THE AUTHOR'S UFE. that year; and therefore Christ could not die in that year, for he could not die but at the time of the passover: on that day, and at that hour, in which the pass- over lamb was to be killed, then was Christ our passover to be sacrificed for us. But that must have been A. D. 33. Then that passover happened on Friday, April 3; then at three in the afternoon Christ must die: it should be neither later nor sooner. That Christ did die at that very time, it may be easily proved by demonstration; and I have showed it, where there is occasion: but, at this time, I am only to give account, how this, that hath been said, can consist with tliose things of Jaddus and of SanbaUat, in Mr. Dean's letter. First, of Sanballat; Mr. Dean seems to think, that he of that name, who gave disturbance to the building of the wall (Neh. ii. 6.) was the same with him, that is spoken of, Neh. xiii. 28, on the occasion of one of the sons of Joiada, the high- priest, having married his daughter: for that these are two Sanballats, is certain; for the former Sanballat, Neh. ii. 10, was governor of one of the small provinces in or about Palestine, in the year 445, before Christ, which was the time of that building of the wall of Jerusalem, Neh. vi. 15. It must have been another Sanballat, that was father-in-law of Manasseh, whom all take to have been him that is spoken of in the last chapter of Nehemiah; for this Sanballat came to Alexander the Great, first at the siege of Tyre, in the year 332, before Christ, which Avas 113 years after the building of the wall; and he died in October fol- lowing, that is, after the taking of Gaza, and just before Alexander's coming to Jerusalem. Joseph. Aniiq. xi. 8. Soon after, viz. in the year 323, before Christ, May 23, was the death of Alexander the Great; and, about the same time, died Jaddus the high-priest, as Josephus tells us, at the very end of the same chapter, xi. 8. Of Jaddus, Josephus tells us, that, immediately after his death, his son Onias succeeded him in the high-priesthood. This Onias m 'st then have been at least thirty years old; he might have been a great deal more; and, if he was the high- priest, of whom Hecatseus wrote, that eleven years after Alexander's death, he saw him, being then sixty-six years of age, as Josephus (contra Apionem, lib. I. Edit. Crispini, 1048, D.) tells us, from that history, by this reckoning Onias must have been born in the year 378, before Christ; and then his father Jaddus, likely, was born before the year 400, before Christ; it may very well be that he was born before the year 404, before Christ, which was the last year of Darius Nothus. This king, as Primate Usher [Annal. I. p. 232.) thinks, w^as Darius the Persian, to the time of whose reign, all the Levites were reckoned, in the times of Eli- ashib, Joiada, Johanan, and Jaddua, as we read, Neh. xii. 22. That most learned primate takes it for granted that the Jaddua, here spoken of, was not then high- priest at the time of the reckoning of these Levites; but, being then bom, and being heir apparent of the high-priesthood, that holy writer might name him together with those of his progenitors, that were all living together. It is not said there, or any where else, in the book of Nehemiah, that Jaddua was then high-priest; only it is said, chap. xii. 11, that Jonathan begat Jaddua; and, verse 22, that such things happened in their days. But, in the next verse, it is said, that the Levites were written in the books of the Chronicles, even until the days of Johanan, the son of Eliashib; which giveth cause to think, that Joiada was never high-priest, but died before his father Eliashib. And, one might be well confirmed in that opinion, by what he reads in Neh. xiii. 28, that he that married SanbaUat's daughter, was of the sons of Joiada, the son of Eliashib, the high- priest. If Joiada himself had lived to be high-priest, the writer would have said in fewer words, that he, that had married so, was the son of Joiada, the high- priest. I know nothing of moment against this, but a word or two, that we read of Joiada's succeeding his father, in Josephus, Antiq. xi. 7. But his word, alone, will be of no great authority with any one, that considers hoAV little he knew of the Jews, in those times, or of the Persian monarchy. The best of it is, that all that we have in the book of Nehemiah, concerning these times, after the going forth of the commandment to build Jerusalem again, THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 39 IS altogether foreign to the matter now before us: it can neither help us, nor hin- der us, in the knowledge of those seven weeks, and sixty-two weeks, that we read of in the angel's prophecy. I desire Mr. Dean to take notice, that I do not reckon the years of any king's reign any otherwise than as I find them in Ptolomy's Canon. I desire your lordship to thank him for his kind remembrance of me, and to let him know, that I do heartily desire his prayers, as I do also your lordship's; for I truly am your most affectionate brother and servant, W. Worcester. DR. PRIDEAUX'S ANSWER. Dr. Prideaux, having received from the lord bishop of Norwich a copy of this letter, wrote unto the lord bishop of Worcester this following letter, in answer thereto: — My Lord, I must acknowledge it is a very great favour, that your lordship would be pleased to give yourself so much trouble, as to draw up the paper for my satisfaction, which you sent to the lord of Norwich for me, and which his lordship has been pleased to communicate unto me. Therein you say, that the objections I made against your scheme of Daniel's weeks, from the book of Nehemiah, were nothing to your business, which is only to show that, from the going forth of the commandment for the building of the city of Jerusalem, till the cutting off of the Messias, was to be seven weeks, and sixty-two weeks, that is, in all sixty-nine weeks, or 483 years; and that, com- puting these years from the 20th year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, when that commandment went forth, they exactly end, according to Ptolomy's canon, at the time of our Saviour's death. But I humbly conceive, that, unless it be made out, that the beginning of this computation must be from the 20th year of Arta- xerxes Longimanus, your hypothesis cannot stand; and therefore it must be your lordship's business, in the first place, to clear this matter. It is said indeed in Nehemiah, that the commandment for the rebuilding of the city of Jerusalem went out in the 20th year of Artaxerxes. But there were two Artaxerxes whom this might be attributed to, Artaxerxes Longimanus and Arta- xerxes Mnemon; and the text doth not determine which of these two it was. If it were Artaxerxes Mnemon, all that is said in Nehemiah of Jaddua, Sanballat, and Darius Codomannus, will very well consist therewith; for it is but to suppose, that Nenemiah lived to the time of Darius Codomannus, and then wrote his book (as he might very well do, without exceeding the age of eighty years) and all wiU be solved and made consistent; and therefore Scaliger, Calvisius, Heivicus, and several other chronologers, come into this opinion. But, if it were Arta- xerxes Longimanus, as your lordship says it was, in whose 20th year this com- mandment went forth; then all the objections occur, which I have mentioned: for, 1st, It seems evident to me, that the text of Nehemiah xii. 22, where the Le- vites are spoken of, that were in the days of Eliashib, Joiada, Johanan, and Jad- dua, cannot be understood to mean any other days than those wherein they were high-priests. For the high-priest among the Jews was the head of the priests and Levites; and after the captivity, 'when there was no king in Judah, had the absolute supremacy in all aflairs relating to them; and therefore it was as proper for them to reckon aU such affairs by times of their high-priests, as it is now with us to reckon of all actions in the state by the times of our kings; and conse- quently, when any thing is said to have been in such an high-priest's time, it is as improper to understand it of any other time, than that of his priesthood, as it would be, when any thing is said to have been in such a king's time, to under- stand it of any other time than that of his reign. For this reason I cannot come into this interpretation, which refers what is said here of the days of Jaddua as far back as the days of his childhood; for it seems to be a very forced sense, which the text cannot naturally bear. When such a thing is said to have beeu 40 THE AUTHOIl'3 LIFE. in the time of Henry the Eighth, will any one understand it of the time before his reign; or think it any other than an absurdity so to construe it? And, to me, it looks altogether as bad, as to understand what is here said of the Levites to have been in the days of Jaddua, of any other days than those wherein he was high-priest. And it is to be taken notice of, that the text joins with the days of Jaddua, the days of Eliashib, Joiada, and Johanan, who were high-priests before him. For it is said, in the days of Eliashib, Joiada, Johanan, Jaddua, &,c. And here I would ask, whether the days of EUashib, Joiada, and Johanan, are to be understood of the days of their high-priesthood, or of the days of their life? No doubt, it will be said of the days of their high-priesthood. And why then must not the days of Jaddua be understood so too? I may add further. What need is there, in this case, to name Jaddua's days at all? Because, if they be understood of those before he was high-priest, they were coincident with the days of Joiada and Johanan, which were named before. And therefore, if we understand those days of Jaddua of any other days than those Avherein he Avas high-priest, they must have been named twice in the same text, which would be such a faulty re- petition, as it must not be charged with. Nothing seems more plain to me, than that the text speaks of the days of these four men, as in succession, one after the other; and therefore we must not run the days of the one into the days of the other. Besides, the whole design of interpreting the days of Jaddua, of the days before he was high-priest, is to support a notion, that the book of Nehemiah, of which this text is a part, was wrote before he was high-priest, and so far back as the time of his childhood. Your lordship placeth it in the last year of Darius Nothus. But then, to name his days with the days of the other high-priests, so many years before he came to be high-priest, and when it must be, on many re- spects, uncertain whether he would ever be so or not, is what, I believe, all the writings of the world beside cannot give us an instance of. For these reasons. I cannot but be of opinion, that these days of Jaddua can be meant of none other than the days of his high-priesthood; and that therefore he was in that office before this text was written: and it also appears to me, that the Darius here mentioned, can be none other than Darius Codomannus, in whose reign Jaddua was high-priest. For the text, bringing down the reckoning through the succes- sion of several high-priests, terminates the whole in the days of Jaddua, and the reign of Darius the Persian, which plainly makes them contemporaries; and therefore Darius the Persian, in that text, could be none other than Darius Codo- mannus, because no other Darius but he was king of Persia, while Jaddua was high-priest at Jerusalem. And, if so, it must be in the reign of this Darius, at the soonest, that this was Avritten, and consequently, Nehemiah, the writer of it, must then be living. And this brings home the objection upon your lordship's hypothesis, because, according to it, he must have then been, at least, one hun- dred and forty years old, which is very improbable. For, if it were in the 20th year of Artaxerxes Longimanus that he came to Jerusalem, with a commission to rebuild that city, and be governor of it, we cannot suppose him then to have been less than thirty years old; for a lesser age would be too early for such a trust. After this, Artaxerxes reigned 21 years; after him, Darius Nothus 19 years; after him, Artaxerxes Mnemon 46 years; after him, Ochus 21 years; and then, to the first year of Darius Codomannus, were three years more; all which, put together, make 140 years. 2dly, The like objection will also lie from the age of Sanballat, the Horonite; for, when Nehemiah came to execute his commission for the rebuilding of Jeru- salem, he found him a governor in those parts, under the king of Persia, (whether it were of Samaria, or of some other petty province, as your lordship says, is not material to our present purpose) and, to qualify him for such a trust, he must then have been, at least, thirty years old. And therefore, if it were in the twen- tieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus that Nehemiah found him thus intrusted, since he died not (as Josephus tells us) till tlie last year of Darius Codomannus, J»e must then have been, at his death, 143 years old, which age in him, is much THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 4 more improbable than the other in Neheroiah. An extraordinary blessing on that good man might be alleged for such an extraordinary age in him, which can- not be said of the other. Each of these instances, apart, look very improbable, but coming together, are much more so, and therefore must be a very strong ar- gument against that hypothesis that infers them. I know some, to solve this difficulty, make two SanbaUats; the one named in Scripture, who is there said to have married his daughter to one of the sons of Joiada, which they wiU have to be that Jesus, who was slain by his brother Johanan in the temple. Joseph. Antiq. xi. 7, and the other, the Sanballat named by Josephus, xi. 7, 8, who mar- ried his daughter to Manasseh, the brother of Jaddua, and built for him the tem- ple at mount Gerizim. But, where the name is the same, the character of a governor in the neighbourhood of Judeathe same, and the circumstance of mar- rying a daughter to a son of an high-priest the same, it is hard to suppose two different persons; and scarce any one, that thoroughly considers it, can come into this supposition. Your lordship, indeed, mends it in one particular, in allowing but one marriage of a daughter to an high-priest's son; for, if I take you right, you suppose the Sanballat, who would have hindered Nehemiali in j^s work, to have been a different person from the Sanballat, who was father-in-law to one of Joiada's sons, Neh, xiii. 28. That the latter only was the governor of Samaria, of whom Josephus speaks, Antiq. xi. 7, 8, and who died in the last year of Da- rius Codomannus; and that the other was not the governor of Samaria, but of some other petty province, in the neighbourhood. But, however, this will not solve the difficulty. For, supposing the Sanballat, Neh. xiii. to be different from the Sanballat, Neh. ii. and vi. (which I must say, is hard to suppose, since, in both places he is called Sanballat the Horonite) yet this marriage must have been in the twelfth year of Nehemiah's government, that is, according to your lord- ship's hypothesis, in the thirty-second year of Artaxerxes Longimanus; for in that year Nehemiah went into Persia to the king, and, on his return, found this irregular marriage to have been made, and therefore chased away from the tem- ole the person guilty hereof Supposing therefore, this son of Joiada (whom Jo- sephus calls Manasseh, and saith he was his grandson) to have been twenty years old, at the time of his marriage, that is, in the thirty-second year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, he must have been at his father-in-law's death, one liundred and twenty-one years old, though this was but the first year of his priesthood at mount Gerizim; and, if we suppose the father-in-law to be twenty-two years older than the son-in-law, there will be the same age of Sanballat, as is above objected, against this hypothesis. So that the making of the Sanballat, Neh. ii. and vi. and the Sanballdt, Neh. xiii. to be two distinct persons, leaves us just where we were before; and the objection is not at all lessened by it, but is rather made the stronger, by bringing in the improbable age of SanbaUat's son-in-law to be a fur- ther addition to it. Thus far I have laid before your lordship the objections which, I conceive, do lie against your fixing the decree granted Nehemiah for the rebuilding of Jerusa- lem, to the twentieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus; and since you build your whole scheme on the supposition, that this was that year, I think it must be your business, in the first place, to make this good, and to clear it against all objections, that it must be the twentieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus only, and not of any other Artaxerxes, that Nehemiah obtained this decree. Otherwise, you beg your principle, and, by thus failing in your foundation, can make nothing stand which you build upon it; for you begin your computation of the seventy weeks, from that year, for this reason wholly, because you suppose, that in that year the decree was granted. But, if that Avas not the year, in which this grant was made, but it was the twentieth year of another Artaxerxes, then you begin the computation wrong, and if so, you must end it wrong, and all must be wrong, that you do about it. And therefore, I must confess, I cannot but be amazed to find your lordship saying, that this is none of your business, and that it is foreign to the matter before you: for it seems to me, to be the principle on which all Vol. L— (> 42 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. depends, and; without the settling of which, every thing else which you do wiL be foreign, and nothing to the puipose. However, I must acknowledge your lordship's scheme is preferable to all others that have been offered for the solution of this difficult matter. Scaliger's scheme hath not only the same objections against it, from the age Zerubbabel and Joshua must be of, on the second of Darius Nothus (from whence he begins his compu- tation of the seventy weeks) that yours seems to have, from the age of Nehemiah and Sanballat, but also several others. For he doth not end the prophecy at the cutting off the Messias, but at the destruction of Jerusalem; neither doth he begin it from a decree or commajidment to rebuild Jerusalem, but only from a decree to finish the rebuilding of the temple; and further, according to that scheme there will be a very unequal and unlikely distribution of the succession of the high-priest; for, from the eiiding of the Babylonish captivity to the death of Alex- ander, there were these six high-priests, succeeding in a direct hne from father to son, Jeshua, Joiachim, EUashib, Joiada, Johanan, and Jaddua. And, if it were in the tAventieth year of Artaxerxes Mnemon, as Scaliger saith, that Ne- hemiah hdd the grant for the. rebuilding of Jerusalem, EUashib must at that Time have been high-priest, for he is said to have been by Nehemiah, at the doing of that work; and, if we suppose him to have been high-priest from the beginning of that reign, that is, for twenty years, before (for he was so for several years after, as appears by the same book of Nehemiah) then, from the solution of the Babylonish captivity, to the first of Artaxerxes Mnemon, there would have been but two high-priests, i. e. Jeshua and Joiachim, for the space of one hundred and thirty-two years; and then, from thence, there must be four for the remaining term of eighty-one years, to the death of Alexander; at which time, according to Josephus, died Jaddua also. There is, I confess, no difficulty in a succession of four in eighty-one years; there are many instances of this every where; but that there should be but a succession of two, for one hundred and thirty -two years in the high-priest's office, which required the age of thirty, at the least, in the person to- be admitted thereto, is not so probable, because, in tliis case, each must have been, at least, ninety-six years old at his death, and, probably, much more. For, it is much more likely, that Jeshua was above thii-ty years old at the solution of the Babylonish captivity; but, if he were no more, it is very unlikely, that, dying at the age of ninety, he should then have a son of no greater age than thirty to succeed him. I am the longer upon this, because it is a difficulty upon Scaliger's scheme, that I have not seen taken notice of by any other, and makes much for your lordship's scheme; for according to that, this difficulty is wholly removed, and the succession of the high-priests wiU faU very equal, and free from aU exception. And, it is to be observed, that the years of their several high-priesthoods, as set down in the Chronicon Alexandri- num, do not only make a distribution of the successions, which is free from all fiuch exception, but also do exactly agree with Scripture, according to your lordship's scheme; but cannot be so according to that of Scaliger. For that Chronicon makes Eliashib to die twenty-nine years before Scaliger's scheme brings Nehemiah to Jerusalem, but to have been nine years in the priesthood, at the time of his coming thither, according to your lordship's scheme; and I look on the Chronicon Alexandrinum to have given us the truest account of the years of each high-priest, in that succession of them, which I have mentioned, and to be the best clue whereby we may be safely led through the dark history which we have of the Jewish state in those times. And, therefore, your lordship's scheme thus far looking fairer than any other that hath been offered, I could wish 5'ou would apply yourself to clear it of the difficulties above mentioned; for, were that done, it would stand for ever. And this prophecy of the time of the coming of the Messias wovdd appear to be so thoroughly fulfilled, in the coming of our Saviour, and the argument for his being the person promised herein, would be made so clear and irreiragable, that i would be no longer capable of any contradiction, either from the Jews, or any THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 43 other adversaries of our holy Christian religion. And therefore I heartily wish your lordship would be pleased speedily to publish your scheme, and to take care to clear it from the difficulties above mentioned. If you would be pleased to give me leave to propose, what I am thoroughly persuaded is the truth of the matter, and what I think would fully solve the whole, I would offer it as foUoweth: 1st. That those passages, which name Jaddua in the book of Nehemiah, were all inserted after the book was waitten, by those who received it into the Jewish canon, most likely about the time of the high-priest Simon the Just, W'hen that canon was fully finished. The whole that hath been said by others on this head, your lordship well knows, and, I doubt not, can say a great deal more upon it, fully to clear the thing, and make it thoroughly appear to be the truth, as I am fuUy persuaded it is; and, when this is cleared, all that is said in the first objection will be cleared also. 2d. As to the other difficulty, which is about the age of SanbaUat, it all arising from the inconsistency, which is between the Scripture account, and Joscphus's account of the time in which this man lived, if you give up the profane writer to the sacred, (as must always be done, where they cannot consist together) there is an end of this matter. And that Josephus, in his bringing down the time of SanbaUat to the reign of Alexander the Great, was wholly out, is no hard matter to prove. For it is plain to me, he follows herein the tradition of his countrymen the Jews; whose account concerning the Persian monarchy is alto- gether false and absurd; for they make the W'hole continuance of it, from the first of Cyrus to the first of Alexander, to be no more than fifty-two years: that the Darius, in w'hom it ended, was the Darius whom we call Darius Hydaspes; that he was the son of Esther by Cambyses, wdiom they make to be the Ahasue- rus of the book of Esther; that this Darius was called also Artaxerxes (w'hich they will have to be the common name of the Persian kings, as Pharaoh was of the Egyptian,) and that it was in the twentieth year of liis reign that Nehemiah rebuilt Jerusalem; and that, sixteen years after, was the end of that empire, and the beginning of the Macedonian. And, although Josephus, who had looked into the Greek historians, could not swallow all this absurd stuff, yet it seems plain to me, he came into so much of it, as W'as the cause of his error in this matter of SanbaUat. For, although he doth not make Cambyses to be the Ahas- uerus of Esther, but carries down that story to the time of Artaxerxes Longima- nus, yet it is clear to me, he makes the Darius, that next succeeds, to be the Darius whom Alexander conquered; for he is the last he makes any mention of, in the succession of the Persian kings. After Artaxerxes Longimanus, he imme- diately names Darius, and, after him, none other. And according to this account, the SanbaUat of the twentieth of Artaxerxes Longimanus, and the SanbaUat in the time of the last Darius, may, very consistently, be made the same man; for there wiU be, according to this reckoning, very few years betw^een them. The truth of the matter I take to have been thus: the SanbaUat who would have hindered the rebuilding of Jerusalem, was th<> same who is said, Neh. xiii. 28, to have been father-in-law to one of the sons of Joiada the high-priest; that Manasseh, who was the son-in-law, was the immediate son of Joiada, as the Scripture saith, and not the grandson, as Josephus saith; that this marriage was made, while Nehemiah, in the twelfth year of his government (which was the thirty-second of Artaxerxes) was gone into Persia to the king; and that, for this reason, on his return, he drove him away from officiating any longer in tlie temple; w'hereon he, retiring to Samaria, about five or six years after, obtained leave, by Sauballat's interest at the Persian court, to build the temple on mount Gerizim; which the Jewish chronology running into the time of Alexander, Josephus for that reason sets it down as done in the time of Alexander; and this, I verily believe, was the whole authority he had for it. And, that he should make such a mistake in those times, is no wonder, since there may be others observed in him, of the same times, altogether as gross, of which your lordship takes notice in your jiaper. I beg your lordship's pardon, that I have transgressed so long upoji your pa- 44 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. lience with this tedious paper. I humbly offer it to your consideration: and 1 am, my Jord, your most dutifvJ. humble servant, Humphrey Prideaux. P. S. And, I beg leave further to observe to your lordship, that, whereas Jo- sephus placeth the ceasing of the spirit of prophecy in the last year of that Arta- xerxes, from whom, according to your lordship's scheme, Ezra and Nehemiah had their commission; all the Jewish writers do so too, teUing us, that Ezra, Haggai, Zachary, and Malachi, all departed out of this hfe on that year; and that the spirit of prophecy departed Avith them. But they make that year to be the last of the Persian monarchy, and the very same in which Alexander came to Jerusalem, and Sanballat obtained that grant for a temple on mount Gerizim, which Josephus tells us of And therefore it is plain to me, that Josephus, in bringing down this matter of Sanballat as low as the time of Alexander, followed the false chronology of his countrymen, the Jews, and not that true computation which your lordship reckons by. TO FRANCIS GWYNN, ESQ. AT FORD ABBEY, NEAR CRUCKERN. Sir, I have received the letter you honoured me with; and you should sooner have received an answer to it, had I been in a condition to give it; for I am so broken by age and infirmity, that I have few intervals of health to enable me to do any thing. I have, indeed, often said, that there is wanting a good history of the East, from the time of Mahomet; and that there are sufficient materials to be had for it, from the writings of the Arabs, of which there is a great treasury at Oxford, especially since the addition of Dr. Pocock's MSS. But I could not say much of the Mamalucs, of whom I know no author that has written in particular; neither did the}' deserve that any should. For they were a base sort of people; a CoUuvies of slaves, the scum of aU the East, who, having treacherously destroyed the' Jobidee, their masters, reigned in their istead; and, bating that they finished the expulsion of the western Chris- tians out of the East, (where they barbarously destroyed Tripoli, Antioch, and several other cities) they scarce did any thing worthy to be recorded in history. The beginning of their empire Avas, A. D. 1250, and it ended in the year 1517, Vi^hich was the eighth year of the reign of our king Henry the Eighth; so that their empire, in Egypt, lasted two hundred and sixty-seven years, during which time they had a succession of above fifty reigns, in which the major part of their kings ascended the throne by the murder or deposition of their predecessors. So base &nd barbarous a people scarce deserve to be spoken of, and so quick a suc- cession could not allow time enough for any of them to do any great matters. They gloried In having been slaves, and therefore called themselves by a name which expressed as much; for Mamaluc, in Arabic, signifies a slave; and, for the further expression hereof, it was an usage among them to take the names of all the masters they served, by way of addition to that which was properly their own.* But what you mistook me to have said of the Mamalucs is true of the East in general; for there are many good histories of the affairs thereof, from the time of Mahomet, in the Abraham and Persian languages. And the many revolutions -hat happened there, from the time aforesaid, and the many considerable events which were produced in the effecting of them, afford sufficient materials for a very good history of those parts, which We here wholly want. For, from the time of Mahomet, there were four large empires erected in the East, in succes- sion one of another, whose transactions deserve recording, as AveU as those of the Greeks or Romans. The first of these empires was that of the Saracens, which in eighty years extended itself as largely as that of the Romans did in eight hundred; for it took 1 See Dr. Prideaux's Lifo of Mahomet, p. 164. ' See Marijat. Hist, of Tam.irlaiie, lib. viii. in princip. THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 45 in India, Persia, Armenia, Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, Arabia, Egypt, Spain, and all tlie coast of Africa, westward, as far as the Atlantic Ocean. It began in the year 6:2*2, and, after having lasted under the caliphs of Bagdat three hundred and fourteen years, it expired all at once, in the year 936. For, in that year, all the governors of provinces conspiring together, each declared himself sove- reign in his respective government, and left the caliph only Bagdat, with the narrow territories of that city, for his support; where he and his successors con- tinued for several ages after as sacred persons, being, as it were, the popes of the Mahometan sect. The empire of the Saracens being weakened by this division of its dominions, and having also suffered many convulsions from the mutual hostilities which the successors of them that divided it made upon each other, the *Seljukian Turks, from the northern parts of Tartary, taking the advantage thereof, A. D. 1037, made a terrible invasion upon it. One part of them, under the leading of Togrul- Beg (whom the western writers call Tangrolonix) seized on all that lies between the Indus and the Euphrates; and the other part of them passing farther, under the command of Koslumish, seized the Lesser Asia, and there founded the king- dom of Iconium, where his posterity, for several descents, till Aladin, the last of them, dying without issue, Othman, from being his mercenary, became his successor; and, in the year 1300, seized his kingdom, and thereon founded the Turkish empire that is now in being; of which Knowles hath given us a very good history. Togrul-Beg, having fixed his empire m Persia and Assyria, and the neighbouring countries, he and his descendants there reigned for several successions, tiU they were suppressed by Jingiz-Can, king of the ancient Moguls, who inhabited that part of Tartary which lies next to the wall of China. For this mighty prince having begun his reign A. D. 1202, formed the largest empire that ever was in the world, for it contained all China and India, and ex- tended westward, on the side of the north, through all Tartaria, Russia, Poland, and Hungary, as far as the Baltic, the Oder, and the Adriatic; and on the side of the south, as far as the Euphrates and the Euxine sea; which was more than double the extent of that of Alexander, or of that of the Romans. And, therefore, by reason of the largeness of it, whenever a general council was called, two years were allowed for their meeting, the remote distance of some of the provinces requiring that time for their coming together. This empire continued in the posterity of Jingiz-Can through twelve descents, till the death of Bahadur-Can, the last of them; when it had the same end with that of the Saracens. For, on the death of that prince, which happened in the year 1335, the governors of provinces, by a general conspiracy, usurped in each of them the sovereignty to themselves, and thereby extinguished this empire all at once; and, we may reasonably expect, that the empire of the Othmans will, some time or other, have the same fate. It hath been several times attempted by some of the bashaws; but it hath hitherto failed of success for want of the general concurrence of the rest. One JNIr. Petis de la Croixt hath published, in French, the history of Jingiz-Can, with an account of his empire, and the succession of the kings of his race that governed it after him; in the compiling of which work, he tells us, he ihnployed ten years; so that, it may be hoped, he hath gathered together all the materials that are proper for the same; but whether he has done so I cannot say, having never seen the book. Thirty-three years after the extinction of this empire of the Moguls, there was raised out of its ruins another empire of the Moguls, who, to distinguish them from the other, are called the latter IVIoguls. The founder of this empire was the famous Tamerlane, by the western writers, who beginning his reign in the year 1368, continued in it thirty-six years, that is, till the year 1404, when he died; during which time he overrun all the eastern part of the world with pro- digious success of victory; whereby he subjugated to him all Tartaria, China, India, Persia, and all else, westward, as far as the Archipelago. At his dezih, • See Mr. Petis dc la Croii Hist. Genjliiscan, book ii. chap. 1. t See Collier. Append. Gengbiscan. 46 THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. he divided his empire among his sons; the posterity of him that had India for his part of the legacy, still reign there, unless the mznj revolutions and convulsions of government, which have happened there since the death of Aurang Zeb, have by this time extinguished it. Of this race of the Mogul kings in India, one Seignior Monuchi, a Venetian, who had been physician in the court of Aui-ang Zeb for near forty years, hath written a very good history: it is pubUshed in French and English; which is very well worth the perusal. He was lately alive at St. Thomas, a town of the Portuguese, within seven miles of our establishment of Fort St. George, in the coast of India. The rise and fall of these four empires, and the several remarkable matters and facts transacted in them while they stood, cannot but afford a very fitting and plentiful subject for an excellent history; and there are sufficient materials for it in the writings of the East, were they carefully and judiciously put together. As to the authors of this sort, which are in the public Hbrary of Oxford, there is a fuU account given of them in the large catalogue of the MSS. of England, printed at Oxford, about twenty-five years since. Among these, are the two famous historians of the East,* Abul-Feda and Al Jannabius, which are now printing at Oxford, in Arabic and Latin, by Mr. Gagnier, a French gentleman, weU skilled in this kind of learning. But, if my lord Pembroke (to whom my most humble duty) desires further to be informed of what the East can afford us of this nature, I beg leave to recommend to him Mr. Herbelot's Bibliotheca Orientalis, a book written in French some years since; wherein he gives account of all the Eastern writers that fell within his knowledge, whether historical, philosophical, or of any other subject. Since that, another BibUotheca of the Eastern writers hath been projected at Rome, which pretends to supply the defects of Herbelot, and give us an additional account of many other Eastern writers, more than are to be found in that author. It is designed to be in three volumes in folio, of which, the first volume, I hear, is already published. As to Mr. Jones, whom my lord Pembroke makes mention of, I do not know the gentleman, neither have I ever heard of him. To make him adequate to it, requires a thorough skiU in the Arabic language, which cannot, without long and sedulous application, be attained unto; and it adds to the difficidty, that most of the books, to be made use of in this matter, he in manuscript, which cannot be easily come at, or easily read. For I know but of three Arabic historians, that are in print, tElmacinus, Abul-Pharagius, and Eutychius; the first, pubhshed by Herpenius, and the other two by Dr. Pocock: but these are only jejune epitomes, containing no more than the bare bones of the Oriental history: the fuU substance of it, to make it a perfect body, is to be sought from other books. The greatest difficulty, in compiUng such an history, would be the reconciling the Arabic and Byzantine writers, who often give us accounts of matters, which are inconsistent with each other: and the same is to be said of the Latin writers that treat of the holy war, they often giving narratives of it, quite different from the Arabic; for both sides frequently choose to gratify their hatred and bitter aver- sion against each other, by reason of their different religions, rather than give us the naked truth of the facts they write of. The Arabic writers, it must be confe^d, are more exact in their chronology than the Byzantine, and, in some other par- ticulars, seem to be more impartial, and to come nearer to the truth than the other. In order to understand the Oriental history, and the writers of it, from the time of Mahomet, a new Oriental geography is necessary; for the names of the countries and cities in the East, which the Romans and Greeks called them by, are now altogether unknown in the East. Abul-Feda is as famous for his geogra- phy as for his history: were that printed with a good version, it would answer the matter: this has been several times attempted, but hitherto without success. About one hundred and fifty years after Mahomet, the Saracens, from the Greek » Sec Dr. Pridcaiix's Life of Mahomot.— His Account of Authors, 4to. Edit. p. 153, ICO.— Churchill'i Collect, of Voyages, vol. i. Introduct. Ixxix. tSee the Life of Mahomet, ubi supra, p. 153, 164, 165. Seld. Tom. II. p. 410.— Gen. Pref. xvi.— vol. 1. p. Ora, 1702, 1703, 1884.— ibid. 1356, 1703, 1866. THE AUTHOR'S LIFE. 47 books (which, in their several inroads upon the Grecian empire, they had plun- dered out of the Grecian Hbraries) having the learning of the Greeks among them, and it having flourished there for four hundred years after the Arabic writers, are, from that time, as full of their accounts of their famous scholai's, as they are of their famous warriors, and equally record what is remarkable of both. If the history of the East, here proposed to be made, should follow the same method, and equally give us an account of the progi-ess of their learning, as well as of their arms, it would render the work the more acceptable to the learned world. Thus far have I endeavoured to answer your letter, as well as my shattered head would give me leave to dictate it. It will very much please me, if it prove to your satisfaction; for I am, Sir, your most faithful humble servant, H. Pride Aux Norwicli, Feb. 6, 1721-2. PREFACE. The calamitous distemper of the stone, and the unfortunate management 1 fell under, after being cut for it, having driven me out of the pulpit, in wholly disabling me for that duty of my profession, that I might not be altogether useless, I undertook this work, hoping, that the clearing of the sacred history by the profane, the connecting of the Old Testament with the New, by an account of the times intervening, and the explaining of the prophecies that were fulfilled in them, might be of great use to many. What is now published is only the first part of my design. If God gives life, the other will soon after follow; but if it should please him, who is the disposer of all things, that it happen otherwise yet this History, being brought down to the times when the Canon of the He- brew Scriptures were finished, it may of itself be reckoned a complete work: fo; it may serve as an epilogue to the Old Testament, in the same manner as wha^ after is to follow will be a prologue to the New. Chronology and geography being necessary helps to history, and good chrono logical tables being most useful for the one, as good maps are for the other; ? have taken full care of the former, not only by adding such tables in the con elusion of the work as may answer this end, but also by digesting the whole intf the form of annals under the years before Christ, and the years of the kings that thep reigned over Judea; both which are added at the beginning of every year in which the actions happened that are related. And as to the latter, since Dr. Wells Cellarius, and Reland, have sufficiently provided for it, both by good maps of the countries this History relates to, and also by accurate descriptions of them, I need do no more than refer the reader to what they' have already done in this matter. What Dr. Wells hath done herein, being written in Enghsh, Avill best serve the English reader, but they that are also skilled in the Latin tongue may moreover consult the other two. In the annals, I have made use of no other era but that of the years before Christ, reckoning it backward from the vulgar era of Christ's incarnation, and not from the true time of it. For learned men are not all agreed in the fixing of the true time of Christ's incarnation, some placing it two years, and some four years before the vulgar era. But where the vulgar era begins, all know that use it; and therefore, the reckoning of the years before Christ backward from thence, makes it a fixed and certain era. The difference that is between the true year of our Saviour's incarnation, and that of the vulgar era of it, pro- ceeded from hence, that it was not till the five hundred and twenty-seventh year of that era that it was first brought into use. Dionysius Exiguus,* a Scythian by birth, and then a Roman abbot, was the first author of it; and Beda our countryman, taking it from him, used it in all his v/ritings; and the recommen- dation which he gave it thereby, hath made it of common use among Christians ever since, especially in these western parts. • Had all Christians calculated their true time by it from the beginning of the church of Christ (as it could be wished they had,) there could then have been no mistake in it. But it being five hundred. and twenty-seven years after Christ's incarnation before this era of it was ever used, no wonder, that, after so great a distance of time, a mistake was made in the fixing of the first year of it. The era from the creation of the world is of very common use in chronology; but this I have rejected, because of the uncertainty of it, most chronologers following different opinions herein, some reckoning the time of the creation sooner, and some later, and scarce any two agreeing in the same year for it. The Julian period is indeed a certain measure of time, but it certainly depends ♦ Sec Scalisor, Calvifins. and other chroiiolofrers, in those parts of thoir works where ihoy write of Iho vulgar era of Christ. And see also Du Pin's History of Ecclesiastical Writers, cent. 0. p- 42. and Dr. Cave'» Hstoriai IJtcraria, p. 405. Vol. I.— 7 50 PREFACE. upon a reckoning backward in the same manner as that of the era before Christ For it being a period of seven thousand nine hundred and eighty Juhan years, made out of the three cycles of the sun, moon, and indiction, multiplied into each other; and the first year of it being that in which all these three cycles of the sun begin together, this first year can be no otherwise fixed, than by computing backward from the present numbers of those cycles through all the different combinations of them, till we come to that year, in which the first yeai of every one of them meet together; which carries up the reckoning several hundred years before the creation, and fi-xeth the beginning of the period in an imaginary point of time before time was. And therefore, although from that beginning it computes downward, yet the whole of its certainty is by a backward reckoning from the present years of those cycles; for, according as they are, aU must be reckoned upward even to the beginning of the period. So that, although in appearance it reckons downward, yet in reality it is only a backward computation to tell us how many years since any thing was done from the present year. For in the numbers of the three cycles of the present year, it hath a real and fixed foundation for an upward reckoning, and so in any other year, in which the said numbers are known; whereas it hath none at all for a downward reckoning, but what is in the imagination only. And therefore, this being the true and real use of the Julian period, the era before Christ for the times I treat of, serves all the purposes of chronology altogether as well, if not much better. For, adding the years before Christ to those since Christ, according to the vulgar era, it immediately tells us how many years since any action before the time of Christ was done, and the Julian period can do no more; and indeed it cannot do thus much but by reduction, whereas it is done the other way directly, immediately, and at first sight. However, in the fables, I have put the Julian period, and have reduced to it not only the years before Christ, but also the years of the princes reigning in Judea and the neighbouring countries, and all things else that are treated of in this History; and hereby the synchronisms, or coincident times and. transactions of other nations may easily be knoAvn. The year I compute by in the annals is the Julian year, which begins from the 1st of Januar}'^; and to this I reduce all the actions I treat of, though they were originally reckoned by other forms. The Greeks, *,before the time of Meto, began their year from the winter solstice, and after from that of the summer. The Egyptians, Chaldeans, and ancient Persians, reckoned the 1st of the month Thoth to be always the first day of their year, which consisting of three hundred and sixty-five days, without a leap 3''ear,t it began every fourth year one day sooner than it did before; and so, in the space of one thousand four hundred and sixty years, its beginning was carried backward through the Avhole solar year. The Syrians and the Phoenicians began their year from the autumnal equinox; and so did also the Hebrews, till their com- ing up out of the land of Egypt. But that happening in the month of Nisan, in commemoration of this deliverance, they afterward began their year from the beginning of that month, I which usually happened about the time of the vernal equinox: and this form (hey ever after made use of in the calculating of the times of their fasts and festivals, and all other ecclesiastical times and concerns; but in all civil matters, as contracts, obligations, and such other af- fairs, which were of a secular nature, they still made use of the old form, and began their year as formerly, from the 1st of Tisri, which happened about the time of the autumnal equinox: and from hence they began all their jubilees and sabbatical years, § and all their other computations of civil matters, as they still do the years of the creation of the world, and the years of their era of contracts; which are the only epochas they now compute past times by. An- * Vide Scaligerum, Petaviiini, aliosquo cnronologos, in ois Ioci3 ubi de anno Grscorum agunt. t So it was in the time of the last Darius but afterward the Persians compensated for tht loss of the leaf year, by adding an intercalary mor.'.b of ii i'ty days every thirteenth year. t Exod. xij. 2. sLe/it. xxv. 9. 10. PREFACE. 5j ciently t)ie form of the year which they made use of was wholly inartificial;* for it was not settled by any astronomical rules or calculations, but was made up of lunar months set out by the phasis or appearance of the moon. When they saw the new moon, then they began their months, which sometimes con- sisted of twenty-nine days, and sometimes of thirty, according as the new moon did sooner or later appear. The reason of this was, because the synodi- cal course of the moon (that is, from new moon to new moon) being twenty- nine days and a half, the half day, which a month of twenty-nine days fell short of, was made up by adding it to the next month, which made it consist of thirty days; so that their months consisted of twenty-nine and thirty days alternatively. None of them had fewer than twenty-nine days, and therefore they never looked for the new moon before the night following the twenty- ninth day; and, if they then saw it, the next day was the first day of the fol- low^ing month. Neither had any of their months more than thirty days, and therefore they never looked for the new moon after the night following the thirtieth day; but then, if they saw it not, they concluded, that the appearance was obstructed by the clouds, and made the next day the first of the following month, without expecting any longer; and of twelve of these months their common year consisted. But twelve luna'r months falling eleven days short of a solar year, every one of those^ common years began eleven days sooner than the former; which, in thirty-three years' time, would carry back the beginning of the year through all the four seasons to the same point again, and get a whole year from the solar reckoning (as is now done in Turkey, where this sort of j^ear is in use;) for the remedying of which, their usage was sometimes in the third year, and sometimes in the second, to dhst in another month, and make their year then consist of thirteen months; whereby they constantly re duced their lunar year, as far as such an intercalation could effect it, to that o*" the sun, and never suffered the one, for any more than a month, at any time to vaiy from the other. And this they were forced to do for the sake of their festivals: for their feast of the Passover (the first day of which Avas always fixed to the middle of their month Nisant) being to be celebrated by their eat- ing the paschal lamb, and the offering up of the wave-sheaf, as the first-fruits of their barley harvest; and their feast of Pentecost, which was kept the fif- tieth day after the 16th of Nisant (which was the day in which the wave-sheaf was offered,) being to be celebrated by the offering of the two wave-loaves, as the first-fruits of their wheat harvest;§ and their feast of Tabernacles, which was always began on the 15th of Tisri,|l being fixed to the time of their ingathering of all the fruits of the earthiH the Passover could not be observed, till the lambs were grown fit to lie eaten, and the barley fit to be reaped; nor the Pen- tecost, till the wheat was ripe; nor the feast of Tabernacles, till the ingather ings of the vineyard and oliveyard were over: and therefore, these festivals be • ing fixed to these set seasons of the year, the making o:Qthe intercalation above mentioned was necessary, for the keeping them within a month sooner or later always to them. Their rule for the doing of this was,** whenever, according to the course of the common year, the fifteenth day of Nisan (which was the first day of unleavened bread, and the first day of their paschal solemnity) hap- pened to fall before the day of their vernal equinox, then they intercalated a month, and the paschal solemnity was thereby carried on a month farther into the year, and all the other festivals with it; for, according as the paschal festi- val was fixed, so were all the rest; that is, the Pentecost fifty days after the se- cond day of the paschal feast (i. e. the 16th of Nisan,) on which the wave- * Talmud in Tract. Rush Ilasslianali. Maimonidcs in Kiddusli liacliodcsh. Sclden de Anno Civili Veterum Judxorum. tE.vod. .\ii. 3—211. I,cvit. .x.xiii. 4— 8. Numb, xxviii. 16, 17. t Levit. xxiii. 15—17. Deut. xvi. !). § Here it is to be observed, that in Judea the barley harvest was before the wheat harvest, and so it w«B in Egypt; for the barley was in the ear when the wheat and rye were not grown up. Exod. ix. 31, 32. lILevil. xxiii. 34. 39. Ti Ibid, xxiii. 39. ** Talmud in Rosh Hasshanah. Maimonidcs in Kiddush Hachodesh. Selden de Anno Civjh Veterum Xu- teorum. 52 PREFACE. aheaf was offered; and the feast of Tabernacles six months after the beginning of the said paschal feast. For as the first day of the paschal feast was the 15th of Nisan (the 14th, on the evening of which the solemnity began in the slay- ing of the paschal lambs, being but the eve of the Passover,) so the first day of the feast of Tabernacles was on the 15th of Tisri, just six months after To make this the more clear, let it be observed that the Hebrew months were as followeth: — 1. Nisan; 2. lyar; 3. Sivan; 4. Tamuz; 5. Ab; 6. Elul; 7. Tisri; 8. Marchesvan; 9. Cisleu; 10. Tebeth; 11. Shebat; 12. Adar. And these twelve made their common year: but in their intercalated years there was anothei month added after Adar, which they called Veadar, or the second Adar; and then their year consisted of thirteen months. Supposing, therefore, their ver- nal equinox should have been on the 10th of March (whereabout now it is,) afid that the 15th of. Nisan, the first day of their Passover, should, in the com- mon course of their year, happen to fall on the 9th of March, the day before the equinox; then, on their foreseeing of this, they intercalated a month, and after their Adar added their Veadar, which sometimes consisted of twenty-nine days, and sometimes of thirty, according as it happened; at present we will suppose it to be of thirty days, and then the 1st of Nisan, which is to begin this year, instead of being on the 23d of February (as otherwise it would,) must be carried on thirty days forward to the 25th of March, and their Pass over to the 8th of April following. But the next year after beginning eleven days sooner, for the reason 1 have mentioned, the 1st of Nisan must then have happened on the 14th of March, and the first day of the Passover on the 28th of the same month; and, the next year after that, the 1st of Nisan must, for the same reason, have happened on the 3d of March, and the first day of the Passover on the 17th of March; and, the next year after that, according to this calculation, the 1st of Nisan would have happened on the 20th of February, and the first day of the Passover on the 6th of March following. But this be- ing before the equinox, another intercalation of the month Veadar must have been made. And so after the same manner it went through all other years; whereby it came to pass, that the 1st of Nisan, which was the beginning of their year, always was within fifteen days before, or fifteen days after the ver- nal equinox, that is, within the compass of thirty days in the whole, sooner or later; and, according as that was fixed, so were fixed also the beginnings of all their other months, and all the fasts and feasts observed in them. But this in- artificial way of forming their months and years was in use among them only while they lived in their own land, and there might easily receive notice of what was ordained in this matter by those who had the care and ordering of it: for when they became dispersed through all nations, they were forced to make use of cycles and astronomical calculations, for the fixing of their new moons and intercalations, and the times of their feasts, fasts, and other obser- vances, that so they might be every way uniform herein. The first cycle they made use of for this purpose was that of eighty -four years:* by this they fixed their paschal feast, and by that their whole year besides; and the use hereof the primitive Christians borrowed from them, and, for some of the first centu- ries, fixed their Easter in every year according to it; but this, after some time, being found to be faulty, Meto's cycle of nineteen years! was, after the coun- cil of Nice, brought into use by them for this purpose instead of the other; and the Jews, following the example herein, almost about the same time came into the same usage also: and upon this cycle is founded the present form of their year. The first who began to work it into this shape was Rabbi Samuel,$ rector of the Jewish school at Sora, in Mesopotamia: Rabbi Adda, who was a * Vide Biicheriiiin de antique Pascliali Judieorum Cycio. t Epistola Ambrnsii 83. ad cpiscopos per ^miliam constitutes. It was by the council of Nice referred to the churcli of Alexandria, every year to fix the time of Easter, and they did it by Meto's cycle of nineteen years. I Juchasin; Shelaheleth Haccabala; et Zcrnach David, et ex iisdera Morinus in eiercitat. prima ia PenU- teuchum Samaritknum, cap. 3. PREFACE. 53 great astronomer, pursued his scheme; and after him Rabbi Hillel, about the year of our Lord 360, brought it to that perfection in which it now is; and be- ing nasi, or prince of the Sanhedrin, he gave it the authority of his sanction, and by virtue thereof it hath ever since been observed by them, and they say always is to be observed to the coming of the Messiah. According to this form* there are, within the compass of the said nineteen years' cycle, seven interca- lated years, consisting of thirteen months, and twelve common years consisting of twelve months. The intercalated years are the third, the sixth, the eighth, the eleventh, the fourteenth, the seventeenth, and the nineteenth of that cycle; and when one round of this cycle is over, they begin another; and so constant- ly, according to it, fix their new moons (at which all their months begin,) and all their fasts and feasts in every year. And this form of their year, it must be acknowledged, is ver}'- exactly and astronomically contrived, and may truly be reckoned the greatest piece of art and ingenuity that is to be found among that people. They who would thoroughly understand it, may read Maimoni- des' tract Kiddush Hachodesh, which hath been published in a very good La- tin translation by Lewis de Veil, under the title Be Consecratio7ie CaleTidarum, where they will find it very exactly and perspicuously described. These having been the forms of the Jewish year, that is, the inartificial form used by the ancients in the land of Canaan, and the artificial and astronomical form now in use among the moderns throughout all their dispersions; according to neither of them can the days of the Jewish months be fixed to any certain days of the months in the Julian year; for, in both of them, tlie months being lunar, and the intercalations made of one whole lunar month at once, the days of those months, to the full extent of one fuU lunar month, fell sometimes sooner, and sometimes later, in the solar form. Since the Jewish calendar hath been fixed by Rabbi Hillel, upon the certain foundations of astronomy, tables may in- deed be made, which may point out to what day in that calendar every day in the Julian year shall answer: but this cannot be done for the time before; be- cause, while they went inartifici ally to work in this matter, by the phasis and ap- pearance of the moon, both for the beginning of their months and years, and the making of their intercalations, they did not always do it exactly, but often varied from the astronomical truth herein. And this latter having been their way through all the times of which this history treats, w^e cannot, when we find the day of any Jewish month mentioned either in the scriptures, or in Josephus, re- duce it exactly to its time in the Julian year, or there fix it any nearer, than within the compass of a month sooner or later. Kepler indeed holds, that the Jewish year was a solar year, consisting of twelve montlis, of thirty days each, and an addition of five days afler the last of them; and our countrymen. Arch- bishop Usher and Mr. Lydiat, two of the most eminent chronologers that any age hath produced, go into the same opinion. Such a year, I acknowledge, was in use among the Chaldeans, from whom Abraham was descended; and also among the Egyptians, with whom the Israelites long lived: and I doubt not, but that, before their coming out of the land of Egypt, they also reckoned their time by the same form. For the time of the flood is manifestly computed by it in the bo6k of Genesis,! one hundred and fifty days being there made equal to five months, which proves those months to have been thirty-day months. But that \he Israelites made use of this sort of year, after their coming out of Egypt, can never be made consistent with the Mosalcal law. According to that, their year must be made up of months purely lunar; and could no otherwise, than by an intercalary month, be reduced to the solar form: and there being a necessity of making this intercalation for the keeping of their festivals to their proper seasons, by this means it comes to pass, that the beginnings of their months cannot be 6xed to any certain day in the Julian calendar, but they fell always within the compass of thirty days sooner or later therein. That the thing may appear the ♦Talmud in Rosh Hasslianah, Maimonides in Kiddush Hachodesh, et Seldenus de Anno Civili Veterum Judsnrum. t Chap. vii. Jl, compared with chap. viii. 3, 4. 54 PREFACE. clearer to the reader, I shall express it In this following scheme, wherein the first column gives the names of the Jewish months, and the second of the Julian months, within the compass of which the said Jewish months set over against them have always sooner or later their beginning and ending; and this is the nearest view that can be given of the correspondency of the one with the other 1 Nisari March jSpril 2 Tvnr S "^'"^^ J lyar . . ^ _^^^ 3 Sivan . 4 Tamuz j May I June ( June ( July SAD ... . |_^„^„s, R T?li.l ) August 6 Elul ■ ■ ■ \ September 7 n,-. ■. \ September 7 lisn • • • October 8 Marchesvan i October I J^Tovember QCisleu . . . \^ovemhcr ( December lOTebeth . . . |^««"'*«'- ( January llShebat^. . . j^--7, 12Adar \ . . j ^^^--^ The thirteenth month, called Veadar, or the second Adar, ansAvered most the end of our March, it being then only intercalated, or cast in Avhen the beginning of Nisan would otherwise be carried back into the end of February. I have, in the series of this History, taken no notice either of the jubilees or the sabbatical years of the Jews, both because of the uselessness, and also of the uncertainty of them. They are useless because they help not to the explaining of any thing, either in the holy scriptures, or the histories of the times which I treat of; and they are uncertain, because it doth not appear when or how they were observed. It is acknowledged by most learned men, that the jubilees were no more regarded after the Babylonish captivity; and it is manifest from scrip- ture, that the sabbatical years were whoUy neglected for many ages before it. For the desolation, which happened to the country of Judea, under that captivity, is said, in the second book of Chronicles (chap, xxxvi. 21.) to have been brought upon it for this very reason, that the land might enjoy its sabbaths, that is, those sabbatical years of rest which the Jews, in neglecting the law of God concerning this matter, had deprived it of; and therefore, if we reckon to this desolation only the fifty-tv/o years that were from the destruction of the citj' and temple of Je- rusalem, to the end of the Babylonish captivity (in which the land was wholly desolated,) this will prove the observing of those sabbatical years to have been neglected for three hundred and sixty-four years before that captivity. But, if we add hereto the other eighteen years of that captivity, in which it was only in part desolated, and take in the whole seventy years of it into this reckoning, it will then carry up the time of this neglect much higher, even to four hundred and ninety years before that captivity: and, as to the jubilees, there is no men- tion made of them any where through the whole- Scriptures, saving only in that law where they are enjoined; neither is there of their sabbatical years, saving only in the same law, and the place in the Chronicles above mentioned. There are, indeed, two other places of scripture which some understand concerning them; that is, 2 Kings xix. 29. and Jeremiah xxxiv. 8 — 10. But both these pas- sages do better admit of other interpretations: for what is said in the former of these, seems rather to refer to the desolations of the war, and the interruption of agriculture through the violences and calamity of it, than to a sabbatical year; and so Grotius and other learned men understand it. And what is said in the other by Jeremiah, about the release of servants, doth not infer a sabbatical jeaf, nor a jubilee neither: for every Hebrew servant was to be released in the seventh year of his servitude,* though it were neither a jubilee nor a sabbatical year; and therefore this instance infers neither of them: and those who undertake to inter- pret the law which enjoins these jubilees and sabbatical years, very much differ concerning them, both as to the time and manner of their observance. Some will have the reckoning, both of the sabbatical years and the jubilees, to com- mence from the first entering of the Israelites into the land of Canaan, and there- fore place the first sabbatical year in the seventh year after that entrance, and the first jubilee also according hereto; but others say, that the land was seven years in conquering and dividing, and that the eighth year was the first in which the * Ezod. xzi. 3. PREFACE. .% Israelites began to sow and reap in it; and that therefore the fourteenth year was the first sabbatical year: and, according to this reckoning, they put the first sab- Datical year, and the first jubilee, seven years later than the former, and so the numbers of all the rest that follow. And then, as to the time of the jubilee, there is this dispute, whether it be the same with the seventh sabbatical year, or he next year after. The reason of this dispute is, because if it be on the year after the seventh sabbatical year, then there will be two sabbatical years together (for the year of jubilee was also a sabbatical year,*) and in this case, there would be the loss of two crops together; and then it will be asked, how could the peo- ple be supported? And they who, notwithstanding this objection, determine for the year next after the seventh sabbatical year to have been the year of jubilee, though they have the scripture! on their side in this particular, yet are not agreed where to oegin the next week of years (or shemittah, as the Jews call it) atler that seventh sabbatical year; that is, whether the year of jubilee, or the next year after it, was to be the first year of that week, or shemittah. If the jubilee year were the first year of that week, then there would have been but five years for them to sow and reap in between the jubilee (which was also a sabbatical year) and the next sabbatical year after; whereas the scripture saith they were to have six.t And if the first year of the next shemittah were the next year after the jubilee, then the shemittahs would not always succeed in an exact series imme- diately one after the other; but after the seventh shemittah, the year of jubilee would intervene between that and the next: which disagreeth with the opinion of many. However, it is, indeed, the truth of the matter, and I know no objec- tion against it, but that it exposeth the error of those, who,- thinking that the sab- batical year did always happen each exactly on the seventh year after the former, have in that order and series placed them in their chronological computations, without considering, that after every forty-ninth year a jubilee year did intervene between the shemittah that then ended, and the beginning of the next that fol- lowed. But they act most out of the way in this matter, who would confine Daniel's prophecy of the seventy weeks to so many shemittahs, as if these seventy weeks fell in exactly with seventy shemittahs, that is, that the first week began with the first year of a shemittah or sabbatical week, and ended with a sabbatical year, which was the last of a shemittah; and so all the rest down to the last of the whole number: and to this end some have perplexed themselves in vain to find out sabbatical years to suit their hypothesis, and fix them to times to which they never did belong; whereas the prophecy means no more than by the seventy weeks to cxjiress seventy times seven years, that is, four hundred and ninety in the whole, without any relation had either to shemittahs or sabbati- cal years. And were it otherwise, the seventy weeks of Daniel, besides the seventy shemittahs, must have contained nine years more for the nine jubilees, which must have happened within the compass of the said seventy shemittahs, and thereby make the whole number of those weeks to be four hundred and ninety-nine years; which no one, that I know of, hath ever yet said. And there- fore, since there is nothing certain to be known concerning these sabbatical years and jubilees of the Jews, as to their ancient observance of them, and conse- quently there can be no use made of them, for the explication either of scripture or history, I have not troubled the reader with them in the body of this History; and I wish I have not troubled him too far in saying so much of them here in the Preface. * In the series of this History, having often endeavoured to reduce the sums of money mentioned therein to the value they would bear Avith us in this present age, whether gold or silver, I think it requisite to lay down the rules whereby I make this reduction. It is to be observed, therefore, in order hereto, that, among the ancients, the way of reckoning their money was by talents. So the He- brews, so the Babylonians, so the Greeks, and so the Romans did reckon: and of these talents they had subdivisions, which were usually into minas and drachms. * Levit. XXV. 11. f Ibid. xiv. 10 t loid. xxv. 3. 66 PREFACE. r. f. cf their talents into minas, and of their minas into drachms. The Hebrews had; besides these, their shekels and half shekels, or bekas, and the Romans their denarii; which last were very near of the same value with the drachms of the Greeks. What was the value of a Hebrew talent appears from Exodus xxxviii. 25, 26; for there six hundred and three thousand five hundred and fifty persons being taxed at half a shekel a head, they must have paid in the whole three hundred and one thousand seven hundred and seventy-five shekels; and that sum is there said to amount to one hundred talents, and one thousand seven hundred and seventy-five shekels over: if, therefore, you deduct the one thousand seven hundred and seventy-five shekels from the number three hundred and one thousand seven hundred and seventy-five, and divide the remaining sum, i. e. three hundred thousand by one hundred, this will prove each of those talents to contain three thousand shekels. Each of these shekels weighed about three shiUings of our money, and sixty of them, Ezekiel tells us,* made a mina, and therefore fifty of those minas made a talent. And as to their drachms, it appears, by the Gospel of St. Matthew, that it was the fourth part of a shekel, that is, nine pence of our money; for there (chap. xvii. 24.) the tribute money annually paid to the temple by every Jew (which was half a shekel!) is called A.if;.xAc»v (i. e. the two drachm piece;) and, therefore, if half a shekel contained two drachms, a drachm must have been the quarter part of a shekel, and every shekel must have contained four of them: and so Josephus tells us it did; for he saith,t that a shekel contained four Attic drachms: which is not exactly to be understood according to the weight, but according to the valuation in the currency of common pay- ments: for, according to the weight, the heaviest Attic dracbms did not exceed eight pence farthing half-farthing of our money, and a, Hebrew drachm, as I have said, w^as nine pence; but what the Attic drachm fell short of the Hebrew m weight might be made up in the fineness, and its ready currency in all countries (which last the Hebrew drachm could not have,) and so might be made equivalent in common estimation among the Jews. Allowing, therefore, a drachm, as well Attic as Jewish, as valued in Judea, to be equivalent to nine pence of our money, a beka, or half shekel, will be equal to one shilling and sixpence, a shekel three shillings, a mina nine pounds, and a talent four hundred and fifty pounds. So was it in the time of Moses and Ezekiel, and so was it the same, in the time of Josephus, among that people; for he tells us,§ that a Hebrew mina contained two litras and a half, which comes exactly to nine pounds of our money; for a litra, being the same with a Roman libra, contained twelve ounces Troy weight, that is, ninety-six drachms, and therefore two htras and a half must contain two hundred and forty drachms, which being estimated at nine pence a drachm, according to the Jewish valuation, comes exactly to sixty shekels, or nine pounds of our money. And this account exactly agrees with that of Alexandria; for the Alexandrian talent contained twelve thousand Attic drachms, il and twelve thousand Attic drachms, according to the Jewish valuation, being twelve thousand of our nine-pences, they amount to four Imndred and fifty pounds of sterling money, which is the same value with the Mosaic talent. But here it is to be observed, that, though tlie Alexandrian talent amounted to twelve thousand Attic drachms, yet they themselves reckoned it but at six thousand drachms, becavise every Alexandrian drachm contained two Attic drachms;1f and, therefore, the Septuagint version being made by the Alex- andrian Jews,"i;hey there render the Hebrew word shekel by the Greek /^ap^cxfov, which signifieth two drachms; because two Alexandrian drachms make a shekel, two of them amounting to as much as four Attic drachms; and, therefore, com- puting the Alexandrian money according to the same method in which we have computed the Jewish, it will be as foUoweth: one drachm of Alexandria will be of our money eighteen pence; one didrachm, or shekel, consisting of two * Chap. xlv. 12. f Talmud in Shckalim. + Aiitiq. lib. 3. c. 9. § Joseph. Antiq. lib. 14. cap. 1^ IIFestus Pninpoius. I)innysiu9 Ilalicarnasseus etiain dicit, talentum Alexandrinum continere 125 libru Romaiias; libra; aiildrn Uoinaiiffi 123 coiilineiit drachmas Atticas .12,000. IT Varro astimat drachmas Alexaiidrinas duplo superasse Atticasve Tyriasvei PREFACE. 57 drachms of Alexandria, or four of Attica, will be three shillings; one mina, con- sisting of sixty didrachms, or shekels, will be nine pounds; and one talent, con- sisting of fifty minas, will be four hundred and fifty pounds, which is the talent of Moses,* and so also it is the talent of Josephus;t for he tells us, that a He- brew talent contained one hundred Greek [i. e. Attic) minas; for those fifty minas, which here make an Alexandrian talent, would be one hundred Attic minas in the like method of valuation, the Alexandrian talent containing douMe as much as the Attic talent, both in the whole, and also in all its parts, in what- soever method both shall be equally distributed. Among the Greeks, the estab- lished rule was,t that one hundred drachms made a mina, and sixty minas a talent; but, in some differerjt states, their drachms being different, accordingly their minas and talents were within the same proportion different also. But the money of Attica was the standard by which all the rest were valued, according as they more or less differed from it; and, therefore, it being of most note, wher- ever any Greek historian speaks of talents, minas, or drachms, if they be simply mentioned, it is always to be understood of talents, minas, or drachms, of Attica, and never of the talents, minas, or drachms, of any other place, unless it be ex- pressed. Mr. Brerewood, going by the goldsmiths' weights, § reckons an Attic drachm to be the same with a drachm now in use in their shops, that is, the eighth part of an ounce; and therefore lays it at the value of seven pence half- penny of our money, or the eighth part of a crown, which is, or ought to be, an ounce weight. But Dr. Bernard, going more accurately to work,|| lays the middle sort of Attic draclims at eight pence farthing of our money, and the minas or talents accordingly in the proportions above mentioned. The Babylonian talent, according to PoIlux,1[ contained seven thousand of those drachms. The Roman talent contained seventy-two Italic minas,** which were the same with the Roman libras; and ninety-six Roman denarius's, each being of the value of seven pence halfpenny of our money, made a Roman libra. But all the valua- tions I have hitherto mentioned must be understood only of silver money, and not of gold, for that was much higher. The proportion of gold to silver was among the ancients most commonly as ten to one: sometimes it was raised to be as eleven to one, and sometimes as twelve, and sometimes as thirteen to one. In the time of King Edward I. it was here in England at the value of ten to one; but it is now gotten as sixteen to one, and so I value it in all the reductions which I make in this History of ancient sums to the present value. But, to make the whole of this matter the easier to the reader, I wiU lay all of it before him, for his clear view, in the following table of valuations: — Hebrew Money. £ s. d, A Hebrew drachm 009 Two drachms made a boka, or half shekel, which was the tribute money paid by every Jew to the temple .- 016 Two bpkas made a shekel 030 Sixty shekels made a mina 900 Fifty minas made a talent 450 0 0 A talent of gold, sixteen to one 7200 0 0 Aitlc Money, according to Mr. Brerewood. An Attic drachm 0 0 7f A hundred drachms m.ide a mina .3 2 6 Sixty minas made a talent r . . 187 10 0 A talent of gold, sixteen to one 3000 0 0 Attic Monexj according to Dr. Bernard. An Attic drachm 0 0 8J A hundred drachms made a mina 389 Sixty minas made a talent SOH 5 0 A talent of gold, sixteen to one 3300 0 0 Babylonish Money, according to Mr. Brerewood. A Babylonish talent of silver, containing seven thousand Attic drachms ..... 218 15 0 A Babylonish talent in gold, sixteen to one 3500 0 0 * Exod. xxxviii. 25, 2r>. t Antiq. lib. 3. c. 7. t Julli Pollucis Onom!.sti:on, lib. JO. c.6. § In libro de Ponderibiis et Prctiis Veterum Nummorum. |( In librode Mensuris ct Tonileribus AntiquiSi H Lib. 10. c. fi. p. 437. ** Festus Pompeius. Vol. I.— 8 56 PREFACE. Babylonish Money, according to Dr. Bernard, £ s. tf A Babylonish talent in silver . 240 12 6 A Babylonish talent in gold, sixteen to one 3g59 6 0 .Slezandrian Money. A drachm of Alexandria, containing two Attic drachms, as valued by the Jews . , . . 0 16 A didrachni of Alexandria, containing two Alexandrian drachms, which was a Hebrew shekel 0 3 0 Sixty didrachnis, or Hebrew shekels, made a inina .., 900 Fifty ininas made a talent 450 0 0 A talent of gold, sixteen to one 7200 0 0 Roman Money. Four sestercius's made a Roman denarius 0 0 TJ Ninety-six Roman denarius's made an Italic mina, which was the same with a Roman libra . 3 0 0 Seventy-two Roman libras made a talent 216 0 0 If any desire a fuller account of the money of the ancients, he may read Mr. Brerewood De Pondeiibus et P^-etiis Veterum Mummaruin; Bishop Cumberland of the Jewish Measures, Weights, and Monies; Dr. Bernard De Mens-uris et Pon- deribus Antigtds; and others that have written of this argument. It sufficeth for my present purpose, that I here insert so much as may serve for a key to those passages in the ensuing History, where any sum of money, or any quantity of gold or silver, is mentioned. So little mention having been made of Zoroaster by the western writers, whether Greek or Latin, the reader may perchance be sui-prised to tind so much said of him in this History, and the time placed so much later than is vulgarly reckoned. But, how sparingly soever the Greeks or Latins may have been in speaking of him, what hath been wanting in them hath been sufficiently supplied by the Persians and Arabs, who have given us large accounts of him, and have placed his time where truly it was, that is, in the time of Darius Hystaspis, king of Persia. Whatsoever we find written of him by the Arabs is taken from the Persians; for it was not till after the time of Mahomet that the Arabs had any literature among them; but the Persians had it long before; for we find in scrip- ture,* that the Persians had books and registers, in which all the actions of their kings, and the histories of their reigns, were carefully recorded; and Ctesias tells us the same,! and that it was out of those books and registers that he extracted his history, which he wrote of the Assyrian and Persian affairs in twenty-three books;t and Persia being the country which was the scene of all Zoroastre's do- ings, there it is that we may most likely expect the best account of him. And since he was there the founder and greater patriarch of the religion which was received and reigned in that country, from the time of Darius Hystaspis, to the death of Yazdegerd, for near one thousand one hundred and fifty years, and con- sequently was am.ong them (as he still is among the remainder of that sect) in the same esteem and veneration that Mahomet is among the Mahometans, no wonder that much hath been said of him by their writers; and, if those writers have been as ancient as those of the Greeks and other nations, I know not why they should not have the same authority. I acknowledge many fabulous things have crept into their waitings concerning him, as there have into the Roman le- gends of their saints, and for the same reason, that is, to create in vulgar minds the greater veneration for him. What I have out of the latter, I am beholden for to Dr. Hyde's book De Rcligione Veter-um Persarimi, for I understand not • e Persian language. All that could be gotten out of both these sorts of wr "^ers, concerning him or his religion, that carries with it any air of truth, is here care- fully laid together: as also every thing else that is said of either of them, by tlie Greeks, or any other authentic writers; and, out of all this put together is made up that account which I have given of this famous impostor. And if the Life of Mahomet, which I have formerly published, be compared herewith, it will ap- pear hereby how much of the way, which this latter impostor took for the jiropa- gating of his fraud, had been chalked out to him by die other. Both of them * Ezra iv. 15. 19; v. 17; vi. 1, 2. Ksther vi. 1. j Apud Diodorum Siculum, lib. 2. X Fhotiiis ill Excerptis. PREFACE. 50 were very crafty knaves: but Zoroastres, being a person of the [greatest learning of his time, and the other so wholly ignorant of it, that he could neither write nor read, he was by much the more eminent of the two, though the other hath had the greater success in the propagation of his sect: the Magians scarce having ever enlarged themselves beyond the present bounds of the kingdom of Persia, and some parts of ]Mesopotamia, Arabia, and India; whereas the Mahometans have overspread a great part of the world; for which they have been beholden to the prevailing power of two mighty empires erected by them, that is, that of the Saracens first, and next that of the Turks, who having extended their con- quests over many countries and kingdoms, have, by the power of the sword, subjugated the inhabitants to their religion, as well as to their empire. To make this History the more clear, I have found it necessary to take in within its compass the affairs of all the other eastern nations, as well as those of the Jews; the latter not being thoroughly to be understood without the other: and as far as the Grecian affairs have been complicated with those of Persia, Syria, or Egypt, I have been obliged to take notice of them also; and without doing this, I could not lead the reader to so clear a view of the completion of those prophecies of the Old Testament which I have in the ensuing History explained: for how could the completion of the prophecy which we have of Xerxes, and his stirring up of all against the realm of Grecia (Daniel xi. %) be understood, without having an account of the war which he made against Grecia? Or how could the fulfilling of the prophecies which were delivered of Alexander, his swift victories, and his breaking by them the power of Persia (Dan. vii. 6; viii. 5, 6. 21; X. 20; and xi. 3, 4.,) be brought into a clear light, without laying before the reader the whole series of those wars whereby it was effected? Or how could the verification of the prophecies concerning the four successors of Alexander, written by the same prophet (Dan. viii. 8; and xi. 4.) be fully evinced without giving a thorough narrative of all those transactions and wars, whereby it was brought to pass, that the empire of that great conqueror w^as at length divided among four of his chief commanders? The instance given in these particulars may serve to satisfy the reader as to all the rest. To make all things the easier to the EngUsh reader, for whom I chiefly design this work, I have carefully avoided troubling him with any exotic words in the text; and, where I have been forced, in some places to insert Hebrew words, I have chosen, for his sake, to do it in English letters. All things else, that may be above a mere English reader, I have referred to the notes and quotations at the bottom of the page; and in them I quote every thing in English, where the English reader can examine what I quote, and there only where he cannot, as the references and quotations in any other language. Several have in Latin wi-itten by way of annals, of the times of which I treat, as Torneillus, Salianus, Capellus, and others. But, above all of this kind, are Archpishop Usher's Annals of the Old and New Testament, which is the exactest and most perfect work of chronology that hath been published; to which, I ac- knowledge, I have been much beholden; and although I have not always con- curred with him, yet I have, for the most part, especially in the ordering and settling the years to which I refer the actions that are related: for I look on what he hath done before me herein to be the surest and safest clue I could conduct myself by, through all the intricate labyrinths of ancient times; and therefore I have generally followed him in tlie fixing of the years, excepting only where I saw very good reason to do otherwise. But as to the other annalists I have men- tioned, I have found it for the most part loss of time to consult them. If I have been too large in my explication of the prophecy of Daniel's seventy weeks, or in the account which 1| have given of the Hebrew Scriptures, or in any other discourse of like nature, occasionally intermixed in this work, the import- ance of the subject must be my excuse. For the chief design of this History, and my main end in writing it, being to clear the way to the better understand 60 PREFACE. ing of the hdy scriptures, both of the Old and New Testament, I have thought myself obliged, in the pursuit hereof, to handle every thing to the full, as it cam( in my way, that might any ways tend hereto. And if the reader receiveth any benefit from it, let him give God the praise, who hath enabled me, under a very calamitous and broken state of health, to finish this first part of my design, and still to go on with mj' studies, for the completing of the other. Humphrey Prideaux Norwich, Aug. 1, 1715. »1 A »• O h^ , (1 A 1^ 1. i; i:' ~"'« V,.,,,..,,,, / 4 \-- V "•. MA. V.I „ '" ■^1 X N 4j*r'N B II 1 ;5 i^< ""t'u;',.,.„„,,-..,,.„.rs*-s_, "■■'fc;;""> ^ ?^y 'lurfhiinii "'■."■'";:"■'"" ■«'.-i..'"!.'."*.< "■••',' "■"' t^-lfl/,..\ .iK*' iV|.i,«„ii,Cj "•r:i3Yir"'i2 ;,^IUm», «>!_;; «i^ THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT CONNECTED IN THE HISTORY OF THE JEWS AND NEIGHBOURING NATIONS, FROM THE DECLENSION OF THE KINGDOMS OF ISRAEL AND JUDAH TO THE TIME OF CHRIST PART I. BOOK 1. Anno 747.] — The ancient empire of the Assyrians, which had governed Asia fur about thirteen hundred years, being dissolved on the death of Sardanapalus, there arose up two empires in its stead;' the one founded by Arbaces, governor of Media, and the other by Belesis, governor of Babylon, who were the two principal commanders that headed the conspiracy, whereby the former empire was brought to an end; which they having, on their success, parted among them- selves, Belesis had Babylon, Chaldea, and Arabia; and Arbaces all the rest. This happened in the seventh year after the building of Rome, and in the second year of the eighth Olympiad, which was the seven hundred and forty-seventh year before Christ, ?. e. before the beginning of the vulgar era, by Avhich we now com- pute the years from his incarnation. Arbaces is in scripture called Tiglath-Pileser^ and Thilgath-Pilneser;^ in iElian.. Thilgamus;' and by Castor, Ninus junior.'' He tixed his royal seat at Nineveh, the same place where the former Assyrian kings had their residence, and there he governed his ncAV-erccted empire nineteen years. Belesis is the same with Nabonassar, from the beginning of whose reign at Babylon commenccth the famous astronomical era, from him called the era of Nabonassar. He is by Nicholas Damascenus'' called Nanibrus, and in the holy scripture Baladan" being the father of Merodac, or Mordac Empadus, who sent an embassy to king Hezekiah to congratulate him on his recovery from his sick- ness; which will be hereafter spoken of And these two empires (Jod was pleased to raise up to be his instruments in their turns to punish the iniquities of his own people; the first for the overthrow- ing of the kingdom of Israel, and the other for the overthrowing of the kingdom of Judah; as shall be shown in the sequel of this history. An. 742. Maz 1.]— In the sixth year of Tiglath-Pileser, Ahaz' began to reign 1 Diodorus Siciiliis, lib. 2. AtlicMiffiiis, lib. 12. Herodotus, lib. 1. Justin, lib. 1. cap. 3. S8 2 Kings XV. 21). -wi. 7. 10. ti 1 Chrnn. v. (1. 2 Chron. xxviii. 20. 4 Hist. Animal, lib- xii. C. « 5 Euseb. Clfron. p. 46. li In Kclogis Valfisii. p. 426, &c. 7 Isaiah xixix. J. fl 2 Kings xvi, 2 Chron. xxviii. 62 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF over Judah; who, being a very wicked and impious prince, God stirred up against him Reziri, king of Syria, and Pekah, king of Israel, who, confederating to- gether, invaded his land with a great army, and, having harassed it all over, pent him up in Jerusalem, and there besieged him. Their design was,' on the taking of that city, to have wholly extirpated the house of David, and to have set up a new king over Judah, the son of Tabeal. Who this person was, is no where said in scripture; but he seemeth to have been some» potent and factious Jew, who, having revolted from his master, the king of Judah, excited and stirred up this war against him, out of an ambitious aim of plucking him down from his throne, and reigning in his stead. But it being the will of God only to punish Ahaz for his wickedness, and not the whole family of David, for which he had always, for the sake of David, ex- pressed mercy and favour, he was pleased to prevent the mischief, by blasting the whole design; and, therefore, he sent the prophet Isaiah unto Ahaz, to en- courage him valiantly to withstand the enemy in the defence of the city, and to assure him that they should not prevail against him; and for this he gave him two signs, the one to be accomplished speedily, and the other some ages after. The first was, that the prophet should take him a wife, who should immediately on that marriage conceive a son, and that, before that son should be of age to discern between good and evil, both these kings should be cut off from the land; which accordingly came to pass: for the prophet, immediately after taking a wife,^ before INIaher-shalal-hash-baz, the son born to him of that marriage, ar- rived at the age of discerning betv\^een good and evil, both these kings were slain; Rezin in the third year of Ahaz, and Pekah the next year after. The other sign was, that a virgin' should conceive, and bear a son, who should be called Emmanuel; that is, God with us, the Messias that was pro- irised, God manifested in our nature, and for a while here dwelling with us to accomplish the great work of our salvation. Which prophecy was then deli- vered to comfort and support the drooping and desponding spirits of the house of David; who seeing so great a force armed against them, and intending their destruction, were under terrible apprehensions, as if their utter extirj^ation were then at hand. From which despair this prophecy fully relieved them, in as- suring them that their house should stand, and continue till this prediction should be accomplished, and the Messias born of their race, in such manner as was hereby foretold. After this, the two kings, according to the words of the prophet, failing of their design, were forced to raise the siege, and return home, without prevailing in the enterprise which they had undertaken. An. 741. Ahaz 2.] — But Ahaz,'' after this, instead of being reformed by the mercy, growing more wicked and perverse than before, in absolutely rejecting the God of Israel, and cleaving to the worst abominations of the heathen na- tions round him, even to the making of his sons pass through the fire to Mo- lech; the next year after,* God brought again upon him the same two confede- rated kings, from whom he had delivered him the former year, who, coming with forces better appointed, and counsels better concerted than before, divided themselves into three armies; the first under Rezin, king of Syria, the second under Pekah, king of Israel, and the third under Zichri, a mighty man of Ephraim; and with these three armies, the more to distract him, they invaded him in three different parts of his kingdom at the same time. Rezin, in his ra- vage, having loaded his army with spoils, and taken a vast number of captives, returned with tliem to Damascus, thinking it his best interest there to secure what he had gotten. Pekah Avith his army marched directly against Ahaz, who had got together tlie main strength of his kingdom to oppose this invasion, and theieby for some time did put a stop to the progress of this part of the enemies' forces; but at length being encouraged by the departure of Rezin to give them 1 fssiah vii. 2 Isaiah viii. 3 Isaiah vii. 14. Matt. i. 23. 4 2 Chron. xxvi-i. 2 — 5. 5 Sidings xvi. 2Chron. zxvii/. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 63 Dattle, he was overthrown with a most terrible destruction, an hundred and twenty thousand of his men being slain in that day. Of which blow Zichri taking the advantas;e. led his forces to Jerusalem, and took the royal city, where he slew Maaseiah, the king's son, and most of the chief governors and great men of the kingdom. Avhom he found there. And both these armies of Israel, on their return, carried with them vast spoils, and above two hundred thousand persons, whom they had taken captive, with intention to have sold them for bond-men, and bond-women. But a prophet from God having severely rebuk- ed them for this their excessive cruelty against their brethren, whom God had delivered into their hands, the elders of the land, fearing the like wrath up< n themselves for the punishment hereof, would not permit them to bring the cap- tives to Samaria; whereon they were clothed, and relieved out of the spoils, and again sent back unto their own homes. Jhi. 740. Jlhaz 3.] — And the land was no sooner delivered from these ene- mies, but it was again invaded by others, who treated it with the same cruelty: for the Edomites and thi Philistines, who next bordered on it, the former on the south, and the other on the west, seeing Judah brought thus low, took the ad- vantage to seize on those parts which lay next unto them, and, by ravages and inroads, did all the mischief to the rest that lay in their power. But Ahaz, contmuing still hardened in his iniquity, notwithstanding all this which he had suffered for the punishment of it, would not seek the Lord his God, or return unto him from his evil ways; but putting his confidence rathex in man, pillaged the temple of all the gold and silver that was found therein, and sent it to Tiglath-Pileser, king of Assj^ria, to engage him to come to his assistance against his enemies, promising thereon to become his servant, and pay tribute unto him. The king of Assyria, having an opportunity hereby offered unto him of ad- ding Syria aii.d Palestine to his empire, readily laid hold of the invitation, and marched with a great army into those parts; where, having slain Rezin in bat- tle, he took Damascus, and reduced all that country under his dominion; and hereby he put an end to the kingdom of the Syrians in Damascus, after it had lasted there for ten generations; that is, from the time of Rezon, the son of Eliadah,' who first founded it while Solomon was king over Israel. After this, Tiglath-Pileser" marched against Pekah, and seized all that be- longed to Israel beyond Jordan, and also all the land of Galilee, and then went forward toward Jerusalem, but rather to get more money of Ahaz than to afford him any real help; for he assisted him not for the recovery of any of those places which had been taken from him during the war, either by the Philis- tines, Edomites, or other enemies; but when he had got from him. all that he could (for the raising of which Ahaz cut the vessels of the temple into pieces, and melted them down,) Re marched back to Damascus, and there wintered, without doing any thing more for him; so that, in reality, he was rather distress- ed than any way helped by this alliance, the land being almost as much exhaust- ed by the presents and subsidies, which were extorted from him by this his pre- tended friend and ally, as it was by the ravages and pillages of his open enemies. And, moreover, two lasting mischiefs followed hereon: for, 1st, instead of two petty princes, whom he had before for his neighbours, and with either of which he was well able to cope, he had now this mighty king for his borderer, against whom no power of the land was sufficient to make any resistance; and the ill effect hereof both Israel and Judah did afterward sufficiently feel; for it became at length to both of them the cause of their destruction. 2ndly, From this time the Jews were excluded all their traffic into the Southern Sea, which had hither- to been one of the chiefest foundations of their riches. This they had long carried on through the Red Sea, and the Straits of Babel- mandel, not only to the coasts of Africa on the west, but also to those of Arabia 1 1 Kings xi. 23— 25 2 2Kingsxvi. 2 Cliron. iiviii. 64 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Persia, and India, on the east, and reaped a prodigious profit from it. King David was the first who began it:* for, having conquered the kingdom of Edom,* and reduced it to be a province of his empire, he thereby became master of two sea-port towns on the Red Sea, Elath and Esiongeber,^ which then belonged to that kingdom; and seeing the advantage which might be made of the situation of these two places, he wisely took the benefit of it, and there begun this traific. There are two places mentioned in scripture to which it was from thence carried on, that is, Ophir and Tarshish. From the former of these David in his time drew great profit; for the three thousand talents of gold of Ophir, which he is said (1 Chron. xxix. 4.) to have given to the house of God, seem to be of that gold of Ophir, which he himself had by his fleets in several voyages brought to him from thence: for what he had reserved for this work out of the spoils of war, the tributes of the conquered nations, and the public revenues of his kingdom, is before mentioned (ch. xxiv. 14,) and amounted to a prodigious sum.'' The three thousand talents of the gold of Ophir, which he added, was over and above this, and out of his own proper goods, or private estate, which he had besides what belonged to him as king. And how he could increase that so far, as out of that only to be able to give so great a sum, can scarce any other way be accounted for, than by the great returns which were made him from this traffic: for the gold alone amounted to above one-and-twenty millions of our money," besides the seven thousand talents of refined silver,^ which were included in the same gift. After David,'' Solomon carried on the same traffic to Ohpir, and had from thence, in one voyage, four hundred and fifty talents of Gold.^ And if Solomon got so much in one voyage, well might David have gained the sum above-mentioned, in the several voyages which were made thither for him, from the time that he had subdued the land of Edom to the time of his death, which was at least twenty-five years. But it must be acknowledged, that Solomon much improved this trade, not only by his greater wisdom, but also by his greater application to all the business of it: for, not being perplexed and encumbered with such wars as his father David was, he had more leisure to attend thereto. And therefore, for the better settling of it, he went," in person to Elath and Esiongeber, and there took care by his own inspection for the building of his ships, the fortifying of both those ports, and the settling of every thing else which might tend to the successful carrying on of this traffic, not only to Ophir, but to all other parts, where the sea, on which these ports lay, opened a passage. But his chiefest care was to plant those two towns with such inhabitants, as might be best able to serve him in this design. For which purpose, he brought thither from the sea-coasts of Palestine as many as he could get of those who had been there used to the sea, especially of the Tyrians,'" whom his friend and ally, Hi- ram, king of Tyre, from thence furnished him with in great numbers, and these were the most useful to him in this affair; for they being in those days, and for many ages after, the most skilful of all others in sea-affairs, they were the best able to navigate his ships, and conduct his fleets, through long voyages. But the use of the compass not being then known, the way of navigation was in those times only by coasting, which often made a voyage to be of three years, which now may be finished almost in three months. However, this trade suc- ceeded so far, and grew to so high a pitch, under the wise management of Solo- mon, that thereby he drew to these two ports, and from thence to Jerusalem, all 1 Eupolemus apud Euseb. Pra-p. Evanj. lib. 9. 2 2 Sam. viii. 14. 1 Kings xi. 15, 16. 1 Chron. xviii. 13. 3 1 Kings ix. 26. 2 Chron. viii. 17. 4 This sum is so prodigious, as gives reason to think that the talents, whereby that sum is reckonp'l, were another sort of talents of a far lessva',.w than the Mosaic talents^ of which an account is given in the Profece. For what is said to be given by David J Chron. xxii. 14- -16. xxix. 3— 5.) and contributed by his princes (xxix. 6 — 8.) toward the building of the temple of Jerusalem, if valued by these talents, exceeded the value of eight hundred millions of our money, which was enough wherewith to have built all that templeof solid silver. 5 For three thousand Hebrew talents of gold, reduced to our money, amount to twenty-one millions and six hundred thousand pounds sterling. 6 1 Chron. xxix. 4. 7 1 Kings ix 26—28. x. 11. 22. 2 Chron. viii. 17, 18. ix. 10—21. 8 2 Chron. viii. 18. The four hundred and fifty talents here mentioned amounted to. three millioiu two fiundred and forty thousand pounds of our present sterling money. 0 2 Chron. vii. 17. 10 1 Kings ix. 27. 2 Chron, viii. 18. ii. 10. 21. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 66 the trade of Africa, Arabia, Persia, and India, which was the chief fountain of those immense riches which he acquired, and whereby he exceeded all the kings of the earth in his time,' as much as he did by his wisdom; so that he made silver to be at Jerusalem^ as the stones of the street, by reason of the great plenty with which it there abounded during his reign. After the division of the king- dom, Edom being of that part which remained to the house of David, they stiU continued to carry on this trade from those two ports, ^ especially from Esiongeber, which they chiefly made use of till the time of Jehosaphat. But he having there lost his fleet, which he had prepared to sail from thence to Ophir, in partnership with Ahaziah, king of Israel, this spoiled the credit of that harbour. For there being nigh the mouth of it a ridge of rocks,* as this fleet was passing out of the port, they were by a sudden gust of wind, which God sent on purpose for the punishment of this confederacy, driven upon those rocks, where they were all broken to pieces and lost.'^ And, therefore, for the avoiding of the like mischief for the future, the station of the king's ships was thenceforth removed to Elath, from whence Jehosaphat, the next year after, sent out another fleet for the same place. For whereas it is said, that he lost the first fleet for confederating with the idolatrous king of Israel; and we are told, in another place, ** of his sending forth a fleet for Ophir, in which he would not permit Ahaziah to have any part- nership with him. This plainly proves the sending out of two fleets by Jehosa- phat; the first in partnership with Ahaziah, and the other without it. And thus this affair was carried on from the time of David till the death of Jehosaphat. For till then the land of Edom' was all in the hands of the kings of Judah, and was wholly governed by a deputy or viceroy there placed by them. But when Jehoram succeeded Jehosaphat, and God, for the punishment of the exceeding great wickedness of that prince, had withdrawn his protection from him, Esau, accord- ing to the prophecy of Isaac, did break the yoke of Jacob from off his neck,* after having served him (as foretold by that prophecy) for several generations; that is, from the time of David till then. For, on Jehoram's having revolted from God,' the Edomites revolted from him, and having expelled his viceroy, chose them a king of their own, and under his conduct recovered their ancient liberty, and were not after that any more subject to the kings of Judah. And from this time the Jewish traffic through the Red Sea had an interruption, till the reign of Uzziah. But he, in the very beginning of his reign, having recovered Elath again to Judah,'" fortified it anew, and, having driven out the Edomites, planted it again with his own people; and there renewed their own traffic; which was from thence carried on and continued till the reign of Ahaz. But then Rezin, king of Damascus, having, in conjunction with Pekah, king of Israel, oppressed and weakened Judah to that degree which I have mentioned, he took the ad- vantage of it to seize Elath, and, driving out the Jews from thence," planted it with Syrians, purposing thereby to draw to himself the whole profit of that traffic of the Southern Seas, which the kings of Judah had hitherto reaped, by having that port. But the next year after Tiglath-Pileser having conquered Rezin and subdued the kingdom of Damascus, he seized with it Elath, as then belonging to his new conquest, and, without having any regard to his friend and ally, king Ahaz, or the just claim which he had thereto, kept it ever after; and thereby put an end to all that great profit Avhich the Jews till then had reaped from this traffic and transferred it to the Syrians, which became a great diminution of their wealth: for, although they did not always carry it on with the same full gales of prosperity, as in the time of king Solomon, ydN; it was constantly, as long as they had it, of very great advantage to them; for it included all the trade of India, Persia, Africa, and Arabia, which was carried on through the Red Sea. But, I I Kinds X. 23. 2 Cliron. it. 22. 2 1 Kings x. 27. 2 Cliron. ix. 27. 3 1 Kiiiss xxii. 48. 2 Chron. xx. 36. 4 Because of these rocks it h:id the name of Esiongeber, vvliich signifies the back-bone of a man; for thest rocks resemble it. 5 1 Kings xxii. 48. 2 Chron. xx. 36, 37. 6 1 Kings xxii. 49. 7 1 Kings xxii. 47. 8 Gen. xxvii. 40. 9 2 Kings viii. SO— 32. 10 2 Kings aiv. 22. 2 Chron. xxvi. 2. II 2 Kings xvi. 0. Vol. I.— 9 66 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF after Rezin had thus dispossessed them of it, they never had it any more re- stored to them, but were ever after wholly excluded from it. From thenceforth all the merchandize that came that way, instead of being brought to Jerusalem, was carried elsewhere; but at what place the Syrians fixed their principal mart for it, while it was in their hands, is no where said. But at length we find the whole of this trade engrossed by the Tyrians, who managing it from the same port, made it, by the way of Rhinocorura' (a sea-port town, laying between the confines of Egypt and Palestine,) centre all at Tyre; and from thence they furnished all the western parts of the world with the wares of Persia, India, Africa, and Arabia, which thus by the way of the Red Sea they traded tc, and hereby they exceedingly enriched themselves during the Persian empire, under the favour and protection of whose kings they had the full possession of this trade. But when the Ptolemies prevailed in Egypt, they did, by building Berenice,'^ Myos-Hormos, and other ports on the Egyptian or western side of the Red Sea (for Elath and Esiongeber lay on the eastern,) and by sending forth fleets from thence to all those countries to which the Tyrians traded from Elath, soon drew all this trade into that kingdom, and there fixed the chief mart of it at Alexan- dria,^ which was thereby made the greatest mart in the world, and there it con- tinued for a great many ages after; and all the marine traffic, which the western parts of the world had with Persia, India, Arabia, and the eastern coasts of Africa, was wholly carried on through the Red Sea, and the mouth of the Nile, till a way was found, ^ a little above two hundred years since, of sailing to those parts by the way of the Cape of Good Hope. After this, the Portuguese for some time managed this trade; but now it is in a manner wholly got into the hands of the English and Dutch. And this is a full account of the East India trade, from the time it was first begun by David and Solomon to our present age. But though it be by all agreed that the trade to Ophir and Tarshish was the iame that is now in the hands of our East India merchants, yet there are great disputes among learned men in what parts of the eastern world these two places lay. Some will have Ophir to have been the island of Zocatora, which hes on the eastern coasts of Africa, a little without the Straits of Babelmandel. Others will have it to be the island anciently called Taprobana, now Ceylon; and, for its being an island, they have the authority of Eupolemus (an ancient author quoted by Eusebius) on their side: for speaking of David, he saith of him,* " That he built ships at Elath, a city of Arabia, and from thence sent metal-men to the island of Urphe (or Ophir,) situated in the Red Sea, which was fruitful in yield- ing abundance of gold, and the metal-imen brought it from thence to Judea.'" But this being a question no way to be decided but from the scriptures, aU that is to be observed from thence is, 1st, That from JElath to Tarshish was a voyage of three years,^ going and coming; but in what compass of time the voyage to Ophir was completed is not said; and that therefore Tarshish might be some- where in the East Indies, but Ophir might be any where nearer home within the reach of those seas. 2dly. That the commodities brought from Tarshish were'' "gold, and silver, and ivory, and apes, and peacocks;" and those of Ophir® "were gold, and almug trees, and precious stones." And therefore any place in the Southern or great India Sea, at the distance of a then three years' voy- age from Elath, which can best furnish the merchants with gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks, may be guessed' to be the Tarshish of the holy scriptures; and any place within the compass of the same Southern Sea, that can best fur- nish them with gold, almug trees,- and precious stones, and in that quantity of gold as Solomon brought home in one voyage, may be guessed to be the Ophir mentioned in the said holy scriptures. Only thus much I cannot forbear to say, that if the southern part of Arabia did furnish the world m those times" with the best gold, and in the greatest quantity, as good authors say, they that would 1 Strabo, lib. 16. 2 Strabo, lib. 17. 3 Strabo, lib. 17. p. 798. 4 A. D. 1497. 5 Apud Euseb. Prap. Evang. lib. 9. 6 1 Kings x. 22. 2 Chren. ii. 21. 7 1 Kings x. 22. 8 1 Kings X. 11. 0 Agatharchidcs (v. 60. edit. Oxon.) tells us, that the Alileans and Cassandrins, in the southern parts of THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 67 have the Ophir ot tne holy scriptures to be there situated, seem, of all others, to have the best foundation for their conjecture. " But more than conjecture no one can have in this matter. But for the better understanding of what Eupolemus above saith of Ophir, that " it was an island in the Red Sea," it is proper here to take notice, that he doth not there mean the Arabian Gulf, which heth between Arabia and Egypt, and is now commonly called the Red Sea; but the great Southern Ocean,' which, extending itself between India and Africa, washeth up to the coast of Arabia and Persia, where it appearing of a reddish colour, by reason of the fierceness of the sun-beams constantly bearing upon it in that hot climate, i+ was therefore called the Red Sea; and this alone was that which was truly and probably called so by the ancients: for the Arabian Gulf, which hath now ob- tained that name, was never for any such redness of it so called; for neither the water (as some will have it,) nor the sand (as others say,) hath there any appearance of that colour, nor was it ever by any of the easterns formerly sc called. Throughout the whole scripture of the Old Testament it is called Yam Suph,- that is, the Weedy Sea, by reason of the great quantity of sea-weed which is therein; and the same name it also hath in the ancient Syriac version, as well as in the Targum or Chaldee paraphrases. But among the ancient in- habitants of the countries adjoining, it was called Yam Edom, i. e. the sea of Edom: for the sons of Edom having possessed all that country, which, lying between the Red Sea and the Lake of Sodom, was by the Greeks called Arabia Petrea, they then named it, from their father Edom, the land of Edom; and, because that which we now call the Red Sea washed upon it, thence it was called the Sea of Edom, or, in the dialect of the Greeks, the Edomean or Idu- mean Sea, in the same manner as that which washeth upon Pamphylia was called the Pamphylian Sea, and that which washeth upon Tyrrhenia the Tyr- rhenian Sea, and so in abundance of other instances. But the Greeks, who took this name from the Phcenicians, finding it by them to be called Yam Edom, in- stead of rendering it the Sea of Edom, or the Idumean Sea, as they ought, mistook the word Edom to be an appellative instead of a proper name, and therefore rendered it '£?«?:« 5:t^:«, &.c. 3 Herodot. lib. 2. African, apud Syrcellum. p. 74. Euseb. in Clironicp. 4 2 Kings xvii. 4. 5 2 Kings xviii. 72 • CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF In this captivity/ Tobit, being taken out of his city of Thisbe, in the tribe of Nephthali, was, with Anna his wife, and Tobias his son, carried into Assyria, where he became purveyor to king Salmaneser. But the rest of his brethren were carried into Media, as is above said, and planted there, as particularly were Gabael in Rages, and Raguel in Ecbatana, which proves Media to have been stiU under the king of Assyria, and that there was no king in Media in those days distinct from the king of Assyria. There is, in the 15th and 16th chapters of Isaiah, a very terrible prophecy against Moab, bearing date in the first year of Hezekiah; wherein it was foretold, that within three years Arne and Kir-Harasheth, the tw^o principal cities of that country, should be destroyed, and all the rest of it brought to contempt, ruin, and desolation: which must have been executed the same year that Samaria was first besieged. It seemeth most likely, that Salmaneser, to secure himself from any disturbance on that side, first invaded Moab; and having destroyed these two cities, brought all the rest of that country under his subjection, and placed gar- risons therein, sufficient to put a stop to all incursions of the Arabs, which might that "w^ay be made upon him, before he would begin that siege; for, otherwise, he could not have been able to carry it on with success. In the same year that Samaria was taken, Mardoc-Empadus began his reign at Babylon.^ He was the son of Belesis, or Baladin, or Nabonassar (for by all these names he was called,) and was the same^ who in scripture is called Merodach- Baladan, the son of Baladan. But, after the death of his father, several other princes had succeeded in Babylon before the crowm came to him. For Nabo- nassar dying when he had sat on the throne fourteen years, ^ after him reigned Nadius two years; and after him Chinzerus end Porus jointly five years; and hen after them Jugseus five years. But of these there being nothing on record oesides their names in the Canon of Ptolemy, we have not hitherto taken any notice of them. After JugjEus succeeded Mardoc-Empadus, in the 27th year after the beginning of his father's kingdom in Babylon, and reigned twelve years. While Salmaneser was engaged in the siege of Samaria, Hezekiah took th^ opportunity of recovering what had been lost from his kingdom in the reign of his father. And therefore,^ making war upon the Philistines, he not only re- gained all the cities of Judah, which they had seized during the time that Pekah and Rezin distressed the land, but also dispossessed them of almost all their own country, except Gaza and Gath. An. 720. Hezek. 8.] — As soon as the siege of Samaria was over, Salmaneser sent to Hezekiah to demand the tribute which Ahaz had agreed to pay for the kingdom of Judea, in the time of Tiglath-Pileser, his father; but Hezekiah, trust- ing in the Lord his God,® would not hearken unto him; neither did he pay him any tribute, or send any presents unto him; which would immediately have brought Salmaneser upon him with all his power, but that he was diverted by another war. An. 715. Hezek. 1-3.] — For Eluleeus,'^ king of Tyre, seeing the Philistines brought low by the war which Hezekiah had lately made upon them, laid hold of the opportunity of reducing Gath again under his obedience, which had some time before revolted from him. Whereon the Gittites, applying themselves to Salmaneser, engaged him in their cause; so that he marched with his whole army against the Tyrians. Whereon Sidon, Ace (afterward called Ptolemais, and now Aeon,) and the other maritime towns of Phoenicia, which had till then been subject to the Tyrians, revolted from them, and submitted to Salmaneser. But the Tyrians, having, in a sea-fight, with twelve ships only, beaten the As- syrian and Phoenician fleets both joined together; which consisted of sixty ships, this gave them such a reputation in naval affairs, and made their name so terrible in this sort of war, that Salmaneser would not venture to cope with them any more at sea; but turning the war into a siege, left an army to block up the city 1 Tobit, chap. i. 2 Canon Ptoleinaei. 3 Isa. xxxix. 1. 4 Canon PtolemiBi. 5 2 Kings xviii. 8. Josephus Antiq. lib. 9. c. J3. C 2 Kings xviii. 7. 7 Annnles Menandri apud Josephum Antiq. lib. 9. c. 14. et contra Apionem, lib. 1. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT ' 73 and returned into Assyria. The forces which he left there much distressed the place by stopping their aqueducts, and cutting off all the conveyances of water to them. To relieve themselves in this exigency, they digged wells, from whence they drew up water, and by the help of them, held out five years; at the end of which Salmaneser dying, this delivered them for that time. But they being over puffed up with this success, and growing very insolent hereon, this provoked that prophecy against them in the 23rd chapter of Isaiah, which foretold the miserable overthrow that should afterward happen unto them; and was accord- ingly effected by Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, as will hereafter be shown. In the ninth year of Hezekiah died Sabacon, or So, king of Egypt, after he had reigned in that country eight years,' and Sevechus,^ his son, whom Herodo- tus calleth Seton,'' reigned in his stead. An. 714. Hezeh. 14.] — Salmaneser, king of Assyria, being dead, after he had reigned fourteen years, Sennacherib,'' his son, succeeded him in the kingdom, and reigned about eight yeare. He is the same whom the prophet Isaiah (ch. XX,. 1.) caUeth Sargon. As soon as he was settled in the throne, he renewed the demand, which his father had made upon Hezekiah for the tribute, which Ahaz had agreed to pay in the reign of Tiglath-Pileser, his grandfather; and, on his refusal to comply"with him herein,^ denounced war against him, and marched with a great army into Judea to fall upon him. This was in the fourteenth year of the reign of king Hezekiah. In this same year, Hezekiah,® falling sick of the pestilence, had a message from God, by the pTophet Isaiah, to set his house in order, and prepare for death; but, on his hearty prayer to God, he obtained another message from him, by the same prophet, which promised him life for fifteen years longer, and also deliver- ance from the Assyrians, who were then coming against him; and, to give him thorough assurance hereof, by a miraculous sign, God did, at his request, make the sun go backward ten degrees upon the sun-dial of Ahaz. And, accordingly, a lump of figs having been, by the prophet's direction, made into a plaster, and laid to the pestilential boil, he recovered within three days, and went up to the house of God, to return thanks unto him for so wonderful a deliverance. An. 713. Hezek. 15.] — Merodach-Baladan, king of Babylon (the same who in Ptolemy's Canon is called Mardoc-Empadus,) hearing of this miraculous re- covery, sent ambassadors unto him to congratulate him hereon;'^ which Hezekiah was much pleased with. Their coming, on this occasion, seemeth principally to have been for tvv^o reasons. The first, to inquire about the miracle of the sun's retrogradation (for the Chaldeans, being above all other nations then given to the study of astronomy, were very curious in their inquiries after such matters;) and the other, to enter into an alliance with him against Sennacherib, whose growing power tlie Babylonians had reason to fear, as well as the Jews. And to make the Babylonians put the greater value upon his alliance on this account, seems to be the reason that Hezekiah showed those ambassadors from them all the riches of his house, his treasures, his armory, and all his stores and strength for war. But by this he hav?ng expressed the vanity and pride of his mind, God sent him, by the prophet Isaiah, a rebuking message for it, and also a prophecy of what the Babylonians should afterward do unto his family, in order to the humbling of that pride with which his heart was then elated. Toward the end of the 14th year of Hezekiah's reign, Sennacherib came up with a great army against the fenced cities of Judah,* and took several of them, and laid siege to Lachish, threatening Jerusalem itself next. Whereon Heze- kiah, taking advice of his princes and chief counsellors, made all manner of pre- parations for its defence; repairing the walls, and making new ones, where they were wanting, and fortifying them with towers, and all other works and buildings, necessary for their defence. And he provided also darts and shields in great 1 Africanus apud Syncellum, p. 74. 2 IJ. ibid. 3 Lib. 2. 4 Tobit i. 15. 5 2 Kings xviii. 2 Chron. xxxii. Isa. xxxvi. 6 2 Kings xx. 2 Cliron. xxxii. 24. Isa. xxxviii. '2 Kings XX. Isa. xx.xix. 8 2 Kings xz. 2 Chron. xxxii. Isa. xxxvi. Vol. I.— 10 74 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF abundance, and all other arms and artillery, which might be any way useful for the defending of tlie place, and the annoying of the enemy on their coming against it. And he caused all the people to be enrolled and marshalled for the war that were fit and able for it; placing over them captains of experience, to insti-uct them in all military exercises; and to conduct and lead them forth against the enemy, whenever there should be an occasion for it. And he took care also to stop up all the wells, that were without the walls of Jerusalem, for a great compass round the city, and diverted aU brooks and water-courses from coming that way; thereby to distress the enemy for want of water, should they come and set down before that place. And, farther, to strengthen himself the more against so potent and formidable an enemy, he entered into alliance with the king of Egypt for their mutual defence. But the prophet Isaiah condemned this alli- ance,' as carrying with it a distrust in God, telling the Jews that they should con- fide in him alone for their deliverance, who would himself come down to fight for Mount Zion, and deliver and preserve Jerusalem from the power of the ene- my, that was then risen up against it; and that whatsoever trust they should place in Egypt, should all come to nothing, and be of no benefit to them, but rather turn to their shame, their reproach, and their confusion; and so in the event it accordingly happened. However, Sennacherib, being informed of all these preparations which Heze- kiah had made for his defence, and perceiving thereby how difficult a work it would be to take so strong a city, when so well appointed and provided for its defence, he became inclined to hearken to terms of accommSdation; and there- fore, on Hezekiah's sending to treat with him, it was agreed, that Hezekiah paying unto him three thousand talents of silver,' and thirty talents of gold for the present, and duly rendering his tribute for the future, there should be peace. But when Sennacherib had received the money, he had little regard to this agreement, but soon after broke it, and again renewed the war as will be here- after shown. However, for the present he gave him some respite, and marched against Egypt: and the better to open his way into that country, he sent Tartan,^ one of his generals, before him to take Ashdod, or Azotus, from the taking of which place the prophet Isaiah dates the beginning of the war which Sennacherib had with the Egyptians; wherein, according as that prophet had foretold, '' he much afflicted that people three years together, destroying their cities, and carry- ing multitudes of them into captivity. At that time Sevechus, the son of Saba- con, or So, the Ethiopian, was king of Egypt, whom Herodotus calls Sathon,^ and represents him as a prince of so foolish a conduct, as was most likely to bring such a calamity upon his kingdom, whensoever it should be assaulted by an enemy. For, affecting the office of a priest, he neglected that of a king, and causing himself to be consecrated chief pontiff of Vulcan, gave himself wholly up to superstition; and having no regard to the warhke defence of his kingdom, he so far neglected and discouraged the militarj' order which was there main- tained for it, that he took from them their tenures, which, in the time of the former kings, his predecessors, had been allowed them for their support: which gave them such a just cause of offence and indignation against him, that when he had need for their valour on this occasion, they would not fight for him; whereon he was forced to raise an army of such raw and inexperienced men as he could get out of the shopkeepers, tradesmen, labourers, and such like people; which being wholly unable to cope with such an army of vetrans as Sennacherib brought against them, he did with great ease overrun the country, and work what devas- tation in it he pleased. And at this time seems to have been brought upon No- Amon, a famous city in Egypt, that destruction which the prophet Nahum speaks 1 Isa. XXX. xxxi. 2 An Hebrew talent, accordinp to the scripture (Exod. sxxviii. 25 — 27,) containing; three thousand shekels, and every shekel being three shillings of our money, these three hundred talents' of silver must contain, of our money, one hundred and thirty-five thousand pounds, and thirty talents of gold, two hundred and sixteen thousand pounds. So the whole sum here paid by Hezekiah amounted to three hundred and fifty-one thou> Rsnd pounds of our money. 3 Isa. IX. 1. 4 Isa. xx. 3, 4. Josephus Antiq. lib. 10. c. 1, 2- 5 Herod, lib. 2. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 75 of (ch. iii. 10,) where he tells us, that her inhabitants were carried into captivity her young children dashed in pieces in the top of her streets, and her great men divided by lot among the conquerors, and put into chains, to be led away as slaves and captives. All which, he tells us, happened, while Egypt and Ethio- pia were her strength, which plainly points out unto us, this time, when an Ethiopian prince reigned over Egypt. For Sabacon, or So, the father of Seve- chus, was an Ethiopian, who made himself king of Egypt by conquest; and therefore, during his and his son's reign, Egypt and Ethiopia were as one coun- try, and they mutually helped each other, an instance whereof will not be want- ing in this war. No-Amon, in Egypt, was the same with Thebes,' famous for its hundred gates, and ■wast number of inhabitants. The Greeks called it Diospolis, or the city of Jupiter, because of a famous temple built there to Jupiter; and for the same reason was it called No-Amon by the Egyptians, for Amon was the name of Jupiter among that people. It is to be observed, that the destruction of No-Amon, mentioned in Nahum, must have been some time before that of Nineveh; for the former is historically related by him as past, and the other only prophetically foretold as to come, and therefore Nineveh having been destroyed in the 29th year of Josiah, as will hereafter be shown, this destruction of No-Amon must have been long before, and in no time more likely than when Sennacherib made this war upon Egypt, and harassed it from one end to the other, for three years together. They who refer this destruction of No-Amon, spoken of by Nahum, to the invasion of Nebuchadnezzar, place it after the destruction of Nineveh, and thereby make one part of the text inconsistent with the other. An. 710. Hezek. 11.] — But Sennacherib did not end this war with the same success as he begun it; for having laid siege to Pelusium,^ and spent much time in it, he was at length forced to break up from thence, and reti-eat out of Egypt, because of Tirhakah, king of Ethiopia: for he being come into Egypt with a great army to help Sevechus, his kinsman, was on a full march toward Pelusium, to relieve the place, which Sennacherib hearing of durst not abide his coming, but raised the siege, and returning into Judea, encamped again at Lachish,^ where he renewed the war with Hezekiah, notwithstanding the agreement of peace which he had before made with him; and, to let him know as much, he sent Tartan, Rabsaris, and Rabshaketh, three of his principal captains, with that pioud and blasphemous message, which we have at full recited in two places of the holy scripture."* It was delivered to the king's officers from under the walls of Jerusalem, in the hearing of aU the people, and in the Hebrew tongue: for they hoped thereby to draw the people to a revolt; but they, failing of success herein, returned to Sennacherib without their design. The person appointed to deliver this message was Rabshaketh, who, his ready speaking of the Hebrew tongue, seems to have been an apostate Jew, or else one of the captivity of Israel. By office he was the king's chief cup-bearer, as his name imports. On their return they found Sennacherib decamped from Lachish, and laying siege at Libnah; where, hearing that Tirhakah, on his finding him gone from Pelusium, was marching after him, as in pursuit of one flying from him, he led forth his army against him, and gave him a great overthrow; for it was from God,^ by the pro- phet Isaiah before laid as a burden upon Egypt, and as a burden upon Ethiopia, thus to be punished by him, and he was no more than as God's executioner herein. But, before he went forth to this last war,'' he sent again to Hezekiah, adding a most blasphemous letter to his former message, defying therein both him, and also the Lord his God, in a most impious manner; which justly provoked the \vi-ath of God against him to such a degree, as brought a most dismal destruction upon him, to the cutting off almost all his army; for when, swelling Avith his 1 Vide Bochart. I'liulpp;. part 1. lib. 1. c. 1. 2 Joseph. Anliii. lib. 10. c. 3 2 Kings xviii. 7, IS, &c. 1'2 Chron. .xxxii. 9, 10, &.c. Isa. ixxvi. 4 2 Kings xviii. in, 20, &«. Isa. xxxvi. 4, 5, &c. 5 lea. xviii. xi. 6 Isa. xxxvii. 2 Kings xix. 2Chron. xxsii. 76 > CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF fresh victory over the Ethiopians, he was on his full march toward Jerusalem, with thorough purpose utterly to destroy that place, and all in it, an angel of the Lord went forth, and in one night smote in the camp of the Assyrians an hun- dred fourscore and five thousand men! so that, when he arose in the morning, he found almost all his army dead corpses; with which being terrified, he fled out of Judea in great confusion, and made aU the haste he could back again to Nineveh, where he dwelt aU the remainder of his life in dishonour, shame, and regret. After this, Hezekiah reigned the rest of his time in great peace and 9rosperity, being feared and honoured by aU the nations around him, by reason of the favour which they saw he had with the Lord his God, in the great and wonderful deliverance which he had vouchsafed unto him: so that none of them after this, would any more .lift up their hand against him. The Babylonish Talmud hath it, that this destruction upon the Assyrians was executed by lightning; and some of the Targums are quoted for saying the same thing. But it seemeth most likely that it was effected by bringing on them the hot wind which is frequent in those parts,' and often when it lights among a multitude, destroys great numbers of them in a moment, as it frequently hap- pens in those vast caravans of the Mahometans who go their annual pilgrimages to Mecca. And the words of Isaiah,^ which threatened Sennacherib with a blast that God would send upon him, seem to denote this thing. Herodotus gives us,^ from the relation of the Egyptian priests, some kind of a disguised account of this deliverance from the Assyrians in a fabulous appli- cation of it to the city of Pelusium, instead of Jerusalem, and to Sethon the Egyptian king, instead of Hezekiah, by whose piety it was obtained; and while the king of Assyria laid siege to Pelusium, a great number of rats were miracu- lously sent into his army, which in one night did eat all their shield-straps, quivers, and bow-strings; so that, on their rising the next morning, finding them- selves without arms for the carrying on of the war, they were forced to raise the siege and be gone. And it is particularly to be remarked, that Herodotus calls the king of Assyria, to whom he saith this happened, by the same name of Sennacherib, as the scriptures do, and the time in both doth also well agree: which plainly shows that it is the same fact that is referred to by Herodotus, although much disguised in the relation; which may easily be accounted for, >vhen we consider that he comes to us through the hands of such as had the ^eatest aversion both to the nation and the reUgion of the Jews, and therefore would relate nothing in such manner as might give any reputation to either. An. 709. Hezek. 19.] — After this terrible blow, and the loss of so great an army, Sennacherib was so weakened, that he had no way of again recovering himself; which making him to fall into contempt among his subjects, several of his provinces revolted from him, and particularly Media, which was the largest and the most considerable of all his empire. The Medes, when they heard in how low a condition he was returned to Nineveh, immediately shook off his yoke, and set up for themselves,'' in a sort of democratical government; but soon growing sick of the confusions which this caused among them, they were forced to have recourse to monarchy for the reme- dy, and the next year after chose Deioces for their king, whom they had formerly made great use of as a common arbitrator of their differences; and for the great proof which he had given of his justice and abilities on such occasions, they advanced him to this dignity. He began his reign in the nineteenth year of king Hezekiah; and having repaired, beautified, and enlarged the city of Ecba- tana, he made it the royal seat of his kingdom, and reigned there with great Avis- dom, honour, and prosperity, fifty-three years: during which time, it growing to be a great city, he is for this reason reckoned by the Greeks to have been the founder of it. 1 Tlievenot's Travels, part 2. book 1. c. 20. and p. 2. b. 2. c. 16. and p. 1. b. 2. c. 20. This wind is by the prophet Jeremiah, ch. li. 1. called " a destroying wind," where the Arabic vers ion renders it, " a hot pesti- lential wind." 2 Isa. xxxviii. 7. 2 Kings xi.x. 7. 3 Lib. 2. 4 Herodotus, lib. 1. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 77 The same year Arkianus began his reign at Babylon/ after the decease of Mardoc-Empadus, or Merodach-Baladan, who ended his life with the former year, after having reigned over the Babylonians twelve years. Sennacherib, after his return to Nineveh, being inflamed with rage for his great loss and disappointment, as if he would revenge himself upon liis subjects for it, grew thenceforth very cruel and tyrannical in the management of his go- vernment,^ especially toward the Jews and Israehtes, abundance of whom he caused every day to be slain, and cast into the streets: by which savage humour having made himself so intolerable, that he could be no longer borne by his own family, his two eldest sons, Adramelech and Sharezar,^ conspired against him, and falling upon him, while he was worshipping in the house of Nisroch, his god, they there slew him with the sword; and thereon having made their escape into the land of Armenia, Esarhaddon, his third son, reigned in his stead. Some commentators,^ will have it, that he had vowed to sacrifice these his two sons to appease his gods, and make them more favourable to him for the restoration of his affairs and that it was to prevent this that they thus sacaificed him. But for this there is no other foundation, but that scarce any thing else can be thought of which can afford any excuse of so wicked and barbarous a parricide. An. 706. Hezek. 22.] — Esarhaddon began his reign over Assyria about the twenty-second year of king Hezekiah, which was the last of the reign of Seve- chiTs, or Sethon, in the kingdom of Egypt; who dying, after he had reigned fourteen years, was succeeded by Tirhakah,* the same w^ho came with the Ethio- pian army to his help. He was the third and last of that race that reigned in Egypt. An. 705. Hezek. 23.] — In the twenty-third year of Hezekiah, Arkianus dying without issue, there followed an interregnum of two years in the kingdom of Babylon,''' before they could agree upon a successor. At length Belibus," being advanced to the throne, sat in it three years. After him succeeded Apronadius,* and reigned six years. An. Q99. Hezek. 29.] — The same year that Apronadius began his reign at Ba- bylon, Hezekiah ended his at Jerusalem; for he died there,'' after he had reigned twenty-and-nine years; and all Judah and Jerusalem did him honour at his death: for they buried him with great solemnity, in the chiefest and highest place of the sepulchres of the sons of David, expressing thereby, that they looked on him as the worthiest and best of all that had reigned over them of that family, since him that was the first founder of it. The burial-place, called the sepulchres of the kings of the house of David (which hath been before spoken of,) was a very sumptuous and stately thing.* It lies now without the walls of Jerusalem, but, as is supposed, was formerly within them,^ before that city was destroyed by the Romans. It consists of a large court of about one hundred and twenty feet square, with a gallery, or clois- ter, on the left hand; which court and gallery, with the pillars that supported i^ were cut out of a solid marble rock. At the end of the gallery there is a narrow passage or hole, through which there is an entrance into a large room or hall, of about twenty-four feet square, within which are several lesser rooms one within another, with stone doors opening into them; all which rooms, with the great room, were all likewise" cut out of a solid marble rock. In the sides of those lesser rooms are several niches, in which the corpses of the deceased kings were deposited in stone-coffins. In the innermost, or chiefest of these rooms, was the body of Hezekiah laid in a niche, perchance cut out on purpose at that time for it, in the upper end of that room, to do him the greater honour; and all this remains en- l Can. Ptol. 2 Tobit i. 18. 3 2 Kings xix. 37. 2 Chron. xxxii. 21. Isa. xxxvii. 38. 4 Bishop Patrick on 2 Kings xix. 37. Salianus sub anno ante Christum 729. 5 Africanus apud Syncellum, p. 74. C, Ptol. Can. 7 2 Kings xx. 21. 2 Chron. xxxii. .'O. 8 Thevenot's Travels, part I. book 2. c. 40. Maundrell's Journey from Aleppo to Jerusaloni, p. 70. 9 Maimonides in his Tract. BothHabbechirah, c. 7. saith, " In Jerusalem, they do not allow a sepuldirt except the sepulchres of the hou.se of David, and the sepulchre of Huldah, the prophetess, which were here from the days of the former prophets." This plainly proves these sepulchres to have been within the wallt ofJt. rusalem, and that the words of scripture, tehick place them in the city of David, are sinctly to be understood. 78 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF tare even to this day. It seems to have been the work of king Solomon, for it could not have been made without vast expense; and it is the only true remain- der of Old Jerusalem which is now to be seen in that place. Hezekiah, during his reign, much improved the city of Jerusalem, not only by new fortifying of it,' erecting magazines therein, and filUng them with all manner of armory, which were in use in those days, but also by buildmg a new aque- duct,-* which was of great convenience to the inhabitants for the supplying of them with water: and for the better promoting of religion,^ he maintained skilful scribes to collate together and write out copies of the holy scripture; and it is particu- larly mentioned, that the Proverbs of Solomon were thus collected together and wrote out by those men. And in his time the Simeonites,'* being straitened in their habitations, much enlarged their borders toward the south: for falling on the Amalekites, who dwelt in part of Mount Seir, and in the rich valley adjoining, they smote them,, and utterly destroyed them, and dwelt in their rooms. Jin. 698. Manas. 1.] — But it was the misfortune of this good king Hezekiah to be succeeded by a son who was the wickedest and worst of all the whole race: for after him reigned Manasseh,^ who being a minor only of twelve years old, at his coming to the crown, had the misfortune to faU into the hands of such of the no- bility for his guardians and chief ministers, who being ill-aifected to his father' s/e- formation, took care to breed him up in the greatest aversion to it that they were able, corrupting his youth with the worst of principles, both as to religion and govern- ment; so that when he grew up, he proved the most impious toward God, and most tyrannical and wicked toAvard his subjects, of any that had ever reigned, either in Jerusalem or Samaria, over the tribes of Israel; for he not only restored all the idolatry of Ahaz, but went much beyond him in every abomination, whereby the true worship of God might be suppressed, and his most holy name dishonoured in the land: for whereas Ahaz did only shut up the house of God, he converted it into an house of all manner of idolatrous profanations, setting up an image in the sanc- tuary, and erecting altars for Baalim, and aU the host of heaven, in both it» courts; and he also practised witchcrafts, and enchantments, and dealt with familiar spi- rits, and made his children pass through the fire to Molech, and filled Judah and Jerusalem with his high places^, idols, groves, and altars erected to false gods, and brought in aU manner of other idolatrous profanations, whereby the true religion might be most corrupted, and all manner of impiety be most promoted, in the king- dom: and, to all these ways of abomination, he made Judah and Jerusalem to con- form, raising a terrible persecution against all that would not comply with him here- in, whereby he filled the whole land with innocent blood, of which he did shed very much in the carrying on of these and his other wicked purposes. And when Gfed sent his prophets to him to tell him of these iniquities, and to exhort him to depart from them, he treated them with contempt and outrage, and seve- ral of them he put to death;® and, particularly, it is said, that Isaiah the prophet on this account suffered martyrdom under him, by being cruelly sawn asunder. This was an old tradition among the Jews," and the holy apostle St. Paul, in his Epistle to the Hebrews (ch. xi. -37,) having, among the torments undergone by the prophets and martyrs of foregoing times, reckoned that of being sawn asunder, he is generally thought in that place to have had respect hereto.® By which horrid iniquities and abominations God was so justly incensed against the land, that he declared hereon," that he would stretch out over Jerusalem the line of Samaria, and the plummet of the house of Ahab, and wipe Jerusalem clean of all its inhabitants, as a man wipeth a dish and turneth it, when empty, upside down. Which accordingly was executed upon it, in the destruction of that city, and the desolation which was brought upon all Judah at • 1 SChron. xxxii.5. Eccelsiasticus slviii. 17. 2 2 Kings .\x. 20. 2Ghron. xxxii. 30. Ecclesiasticusxlviii. 17. 3 Prov. XXV. 1. 4 1 Chron. iv. 30 — 43. 5 2 Kings xxi. 2 Chron. xxxiii. 6 Josephus Antiq. lib. 10. c. 4. 7 Talmud. Hierosol. in Sanhedrin, fol. 28. col. 3. Talm. Babylon in Jevammoth, fol. 49. col. 2. et in Sanhe- drin, fol. 103. col. 2. Shalsheletli Hakkabalah, fol. 19. col. 1. Yalfcut in Lib. Regum, fol. 38. col. 4. 8 Vid. Justin. Martyr, in DiaJogo cum Tryphone. Hieronymum in Esaiani, c. 30. et 57. Epipbanium el alioa. 9 2 Kings xxi. 13. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 79 the same time. And among all the iniquities that drew down these heavy judg- ments upon that city and land, the sins of Manasseh are always reckoned as the most provoking cause;' by which an estimate may be best made of the greatness of them. Jin. 694. Manas. 5.] — In the fifth year of Manasseh died Apronadius,^ king of Babylon, and was succeeded by Regibilus,- who reigned only one year. After him Mesessimordacus'^ had the kingdom, and held it four years. Jin. 688. Manas. 11.] — In the eleventh year of Manasseh died Tirhakah,^ king of Egypt, after he had reigned there eighteen years, who was the last of the Ethiopian kings that reigned in that country. The Egyptians, after his death, not being able to agree about the succession, continued for two years to- gether in a state of anarchy and great confusion, ** till at length* twelve of the principal nobility conspiring together, seized »the kingdom, and, dividing it among themselves into tjvelve parts, governed it by joint confederacy fifteen years. Jin. 680. Manas. 19.] — The same year that this happened in Egypt, by the death of Tirhakah, the Uke happened in Babylon, by the death of Mesessimor- dacus. For, he leaving no son behind him to inherit the kingdom, an interreg- num of anarchy and confusion followed there for eight years together;* of which Esarhaddon, king of Assyria, taking the advantage, seized Babylon; and adding it to his former empire, thenceforth reigned over both for thirteen years.'' He is, in the Canon of Ptolemy, called Assar-Addinus: and in the scriptures he is spoken of as king of Babylon and Assyria jointly together.® In Ezra he is called Asnapper,^ and hath there the honourable epithets of the great and noble added to his name by the author of that book; which argues him to have been a prince of great excellency and worth in his time, and far exceeding all others that reigned before him in either of the kingdoms. An. 677. Manas. 22.] — In the twenty-second year of Manasseh, Esarhaddon, after he had now entered on the fourth year of his reign in Babylon, and fuUy settled his authority there, began to set his thoughts on the recovery of what had been lost to the empire of the Assyrians, in Syria and Palestine, on the de- struction of his father's army in Judea, and on that doleful retreat, which there- on he was forced to make from thence; and, being encouraged to this undertak- ing by the great augmentation of strength which he had acquired, by adding Babylon and Chaldea to his former kingdom of Assyria, he prepared a great army and marched into those parts, and again added them to the Assyrian em- pire. And then was accomplished the prophecy which was spoken by Isaiah, m the first year of Ahaz, against Samaria, that, within threescore and five years, Ephraiiji should be absolutely broken, so as from thenceforth to be no more a people.'" For this year, being exactly sixty-five years from the first of Ahaz, Esarhaddon, after he had settled aU affairs in Syria, marched into the land of Israel, and there taking captive all those who were the remains of the former captivity (excepting onl}^ some few, who escaped his hands, and conti- nued still in the land,) carried them away into Babylon and Assyria; and then, to prevent the land from becoming desolate, he brought others from Babylon," and from Cutha, and from Avah, and Hamath, and Sephervaim, to dwell in the cities of Samaria in their stead. And so the ten tribes of Israel, which had separated from the house of David, were brought to a full and utter destruction, and never after recovered themselves again. For those who were thus carried away, as well in this as the former captivities (excepting only some few, who joining themselves to the Jews in the land of their captivity, returned with 1 2 Kings xxiii. 2(). xxiv. 3. Jer. xv. 4. 2 Can. Pt«lcm.-ci. 3 Africanus apud Syncelhim. p. 74. 4 Diodorus Siculus, lib. 1. 5 Herodotus, lib. 2. Diodoriis Siculus, lib. 1. C Canon Ptoleina;i. 7 Ibid. 8 Ho is said, as king of Assyria, to have brought a colc^y out of Babylon into Samaria, 2 Kings xvii. 24. Ezra iv. 0, 10. which he could not have done, if he liad not been king of Babylon, as well as of Assyria, at that time. And, in 2 Chroii. xxiii. 11. he is said, as king of As.syria, to have taken Manasseh prisonflr, and to have carried him to Babylon, which argues him at tliat time to have been king of Babylon also. 9 Ezra iv. 10. 10 Isa. vii. 8. 11 2 Kings xvii. 24. Ezra iv. 2. 10. 80 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF them,) soon going into the usages aad idolatry of the nations among whom they were planted (to which they were too much addicted while in their own land,) after awhile became wholly absorbed and swallowed up in them; and thence- forth utterly losing their name, their language, and their memorial, were never after any more spoken of. And whereas there is a sect of Samaritans still re- maining in Samaria, Sichem, and other towns thereabout, even to this day, who still have the law of Moses • in a character peculiar to themselves, and in a dia- lect very little, if any thing at all, different from that of the Jews: yet these are not of the descendants of the Israehtes, but of those nations which Esarhaddon brought to dweU in that country in their stead, after the others had been carried thence into captivity; and, for this reason, the Jews call them by no other name than that of Cuthites (the name of one of those nations whom Esarhaddon had planted there,) and have that utter hatred and aversion to them, that, reckoning them among the worst of heretics, they express on all occasions a greater detes- tation of them than they do even of the Christians themselves. Esarhaddon, after he had thus possessed himself of the land of Israel, sent some of his princes with part of his army into Judea, to reduce that country also under his subjection; who having vanquished Manasseh in battle,^ and taken him, hid in a thicket of thorns, brought him prisoner to Esarhaddon, who bound him in fetters, and carried him to Babylon; where, his chains and his prison having brought him to himself, and a due sense of his great sin, wherewith he had sinned against the Lord his God, he returned unto him with repentance and prayer, and in his affliction greatly humbled himself before him; whereon, God being entreated of by him, he mollified the heart of the king of Babylon toward him, so that, on a treaty, he was again restored to his hberty, and returned to Je- rusalem; and then, knowing the Lord to be God, he aboUshed all those idolatrous profanations, both out of the temple, and out of all other parts of the land, which he had in his wickedness introduced into them, and again restored in all things the reformation of king Hezekiah, his father, and walked according thereto all the remainder of his life, worshipping the Lord his God only, and none other. And all Judah conformed to him herein; so that he continued in prosperity after this to the end of his reign, which was the longest of any of the kings that had sat on the throne of David, either before or after him: for he reigned full fifty- five years, and these being all reckoned to his reign without any chasm, it is argued from hence that his captivity at Babylon could not have been long; but that he was, within a very short time after, again released from it. And to this time may be referred the completion of the prophecy of Isaiah concerning the removal of Shebna,^ the chief minister of state, and the advance- ment of Eliakim, the son of Hilkiah, in his place. Both of them had been ministers of state under king Hezekiah; Shebna having been his scribe or secre- tary, and EUakim the master of his household. And their history, as far as may be collected from the words of the prophet, appears to be thus: — Shebna, being a very wicked man, was a fit person to serve the lusts and evil inclinations of Manasseh in the first part of his reign, and therefore was made his first minister of state; and Eliakim, who was of a quite contrary character, was quite laid aside. But on the revolution that happened on the coming of the army of the Assyrians, Shebna was taken prisoner with his master,^ and carried to Babylon, and there detained in captivity to his death.'* And therefore Manasseh, on his repentance and return to Jerusalem, having resolved on other measures, called for Eliakim, and put the management of aU his affairs into his hands; who be- ing a person of great wisdom, justice, and piety, soon re-established them upon the same foot as they had been in the days of Hezekiah, and so preserved them in peace and prosperity all his time to the great honour of the king, and the good of all his people; and therefore he hath the character given him of oeii^g a father to tlie inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to all the house of Judah,* and that, having 1 2 Chron. xixiii. 11. Josephus Antiq, lib. 10. c. 4. 2 Isa. .xxii. 15- 25. 3 Isa. xxii. 17. 4 Ibid. xxii. 18. 5 Isa. xxii. 21. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 81 the key and government of the house of David upon his shoulders, he was the great support of it all his days.' This Eliakim is supposed to have been of the pontifical family, and to have himself, in the time of Manasseh, borne the office of high-priest, and to have been the same who is mentioned by the name of Joakim, or Eliakim, in the history of Judith, as high-priest at that time; for Joakim and Eliakim are both the same name, being both of the same significa- tion in the Hebrew tongue; and therefore, the said high-priest in Judith is, in the Syriac ^^-ersion, and also in Jerome's Latin version of that book, called pro- miscuously by both these names. But of this more will be said hereafter in its proper place. An. 676. Manas. 23.] — The nations which Esarhaddon had brought to dwell in the cities of Samaria, instead of the Israelites, who had been carried thence, being, on their settling in that country, much infested with lions;" and the king of Babylon being told, that it was because they worshipped not the God of the country, he ordered, that one of the priests which had been carried thence, should be sent back to teach these new inhabitants how to worship the God of Israel. But they only took him hereon into the number of their former deities, and worshipped him jointly with the gods of the nations from whence they came; and in this corruption of joining the worship of their false gods with that of the true, they continued, till the building of the Samaritan temple on Mount Geri- zim by Sanballat; but, on that occasion, abundance of Jews falling off to them, they reduced them from this idolatry to the worship of the true God only, as shall be hereafter related; and they have continued in the same worship ever since, even to this day. An. 671. Manas. 28.] — In the eight-and-twentieth year of the reign of Ma- nasseh, the twelve confederated sovereigns of Egypt, after they had jointly reigned there fifteen years, falling out among themselves, expelled Psammiti- chus, one of their number, out of his share,' which he had hitherto had with them in the government of the kingdom, and drove him into banishment; where- on, flying into the fens near the sea, he lay hid there, till, having gotten together out of the Arabian freebooters, and the pirates of Caria and Ionia, such a number of soldiers, as with the Egyptians of his party made a considerable army, he marched with it against the other eleven; and having overthrown them in battle slew several of them, and drove the rest out of the land; and thereon seizing the whole kingdom to himself, reigned over it in great prosperity fifty and four years. An. 670. Manas. 29.] — As soon as he was well settled in the kingdom, he entered into a war with the king of Assyria, about the boundaries of their two empires,* which lasted many years: for, after the Assyrians had conquered Syria, Palestine only spearating their respective territories, it became a constant •Jone of contention between them, as it was between the Ptolemies and the Seleucidse afterward, both parties striving which of the two should have the mastery of this province; and, according as they prevailed, sometimes the one, and sometimes the other, possessed themselves of it. From the time of Heze- kiah, it appears to have been in the hands of the Egyptians till the captlvitj- of Manasseh. But when Esarhaddon had conquered Judea, and carried the king prisoner to Babylon (as hath been above mentioned,) it is plain, that, from thenceforth the king of Assyria became master of all, even to the very entry of Egypt; and the Egyptians, being at that time divided under several princes, and in civil wars among themselves, were in no capacity to put a stop to this pro- gress. But when Psammitichus had gained the whole monarchy to himself, and again settled the affairs of that kingdom upon its former foundation (which hap- pened about seven years after the captivity of Manasseh,) he thought it tiiiie to ook to the frontiers of his kingdom, and secure them as well as he could against fie power of this growing neighbour, and therefore marched with an army into 1 Isa. xxii. 2'2. 2 3 Kings xvii. 3 Herodot. lib. 3. Diodorus Siculu*. lik U 4 Herodot. lib. 2. Vol. I.— 11 82 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Palestine for this purpose; but, in the entry thereof, he found Ashdod, one of the first towns of that country, so strong a barrier against him, that it cost him a blockade of nine-and-twenty years' before he could make himself master of it. This place had formerly been one of the five capital cities of the country of the PhiUstines.^ After this, the Egyptians got possession of it, and by well fortify- ing it, made it so strong a barrier of their empire on that side, that Sennacherib could not enter Egypt, tiU he had, by Tartan, one of his generals, made himself master of it;^ and, when he had gotten it into his possession, finding, the impor tance of the place, he added so much to its strength, that notwithstanding his unfortunate retreat out of Egypt, and the terrible loss of his army in Judea, im- mediately after, the Assyrians still kept it even to this time; and it was not without that long and tedious siege, which I have mentioned, that the Egyptians at last Decame again masters of it. And, when they had gotten it, they found it in such a manner wasted and reduced by so long a war, that it did them but little sev'^ice afterward: it being then no more than the carcass of that city, which it hart formerly been. And therefore, the prophet Jeremiah, speaking of it, caUs it " the remnant of Ashdod,"* intimating thereby, that it was then only the poor remains of what it had been in times foregoing. But, notwithstanding this long siege, the whole war did not rest there. While part of the army lay at the blockade, the rest cai'ried on the war against the other parts of Palestine; and so it continued many years, which obhged Manasseh to Ibrtify Jerusalem anew,* and to put strong garrisons into all his frontier towns against them; for since his release from the captivity of the Assyrians, and the restoration of his kingdom again to him, he was obliged to become their homager, and engage on their side in this war against the Egyptians, although they had been his former aUies. And, the better to enable him to support himself herein, and also the more fii-mly to fix him in his fidelity to them, they seem at this time to have put under his command all the other parts of the land of Canaan, that is, all that had formerly been possessed by the kings of Samaria, as well as what belonged to him as king of Judah; for it is certain, that Josiah, his grand- son, had all this (as wiU be hereafl:er shown,) that is, not only the two tribes which made up the kingdom of Judah, but also that had formerly been possessed by the other ten under the kings of Israel. And the most probable account that can be given of his coming by all this, is, that it was aU given to Manasseh on this occasion, to hold in homage of the kings of Assyria, and that, after his death, it was continued to his son and grandson on the same conditions; in the perfor- mance of which, that good and just prince, king Josiah, afterward lost his life, as wiU be shown in its proper place. An. 668. Manas. 31. An. 656. Manas. 43.]— In the thirty-first year of Ma- nasseh died Esarhaddon, after he had reigned, with great felicity, thirty-nine years over the Assyrians, and thirteen over the Babylonians; and Saosduchinus, his son, reigned in his stead.^ He is the same who in the book of Judith is called Nabuchodonosor.'' In the beginning of the twelfth year of his reign, which was the forty-third of Manasseh, he fought a great battle in the plains of Ragau,^ with Deioces, king of Media (who in the book of Judith is called Arphaxad,^) and having overthrown him, and put him to flight, pursued after him to the adjacent mountains, where he made his retreat, and there, having overtaken him, he cut him off" and all his army; and thereon following his blow, and making the best of the advantage he had gotten, he made himself master of many of the cities of Media, and among them took Ecbatana itself,'" the royal seat of the Median empire; and after having miserably defaced it, returned in great triumph to Nineveh, and there took his pleasure in banqueting and feasting, both he and his army, for an hundred and twenty days. An. 655. Manas. 44.] — After this time of feasting was over, he called his offi- 1 Herodot. lib. 2. 2 1 Sam. vi. 17. 3 Isa. xx. J. 4 Jer. xxv. 20. 5 2Cliron. xxxiii. 14. 6 Canon Ptol. 7 Judith i.i. 8 Ibid. i. 5. 9 Ibid. i. 1. 10 Ibid. i. U. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ^3 cers, nobles, and chief counsellors' together, to take an account of what tributary countries and provinces had not gone with him to the war, for he had summoned them all to attend him herein; and, finding that none of the western countries had paid any regard to his commands in this matter, he made a decree, that Holofernes, the chief captain of his army, should go forth, to execute the wrath of his lord upon them for it. And accordingly, the next year after, he marched westward with an army of an hundred and twenty thousand foot, and twelve thousand horse, and there wasted and destroyed a great many of those nations; till at length coming into Judea, and laying siege to Bathulia, he was there destroyed, and all his army cut in pieces, in the manner as is in the book of Judith at full related. That Arphaxad in the said book of Judith was Deioces, and Nabuchodonosor, Saosduchinus, appears from hence, that Arphaxad is said to be that kiag of Media, who was the founder of Ecbatana,^ which all other writers agree to have been Deioces; and the beginning of the twelfth year of Saosduchinus exactly agreeth with the last year of Deioces, when this battle of Ragau is said to have been fought. And there are several particulars in that history, which make it utterly inconsistent with any other times; for it was while Nineveh was the metropolis of the Assyrian empire;^ it was while the Persians,* Syrians, Phoeni- cians, Cilicians, and Egyptians, were subject to them; it was while the Median empire was in being,^ and not long after the building of Ecbatana; none of which could be after the captivity of Judah, where some would place this history. For, before that time, Nineveh had been long destroyed, and both the Assyrian and Median empires had been wholly extinguished; and the Persians, instead of being subject to the Assyrians, had made themselves lords over them, and over all the other nations from the east, from the Hellespont to the River Indus: for so far they had extended and estabUshed their empire, before the Jews were returned from the Babylonish captivity, and settled again in their own country. And therefore, we must go much higher than the times after that captivity, to find a proper scene for the matters in that book related; and it can be no where laid more agreeably, both with scripture and profane history, than in the time where I have placed it. This book of Judith was originally written in the Chaldee language,^ by some Jew of Babylon (which is not now extant,) and from thence, at the desire of Paula and Eustochium, was by St. Jerome translated into the Latin tongue; which is the translation that is now extant in the vulgar Latin edition of the Bible, of which he himself saith, in the preface before it, that he did not trans- late it word for word, but only rendered it according to the sense of the author; and that, cutting off all the corruptions of various readings, which he found in different copies, he did put only that into the translation, which he judged to be the true and entire sense of the original. But besides this translation of St. Jerome there are two others, one in Greek, and the other in Syriac. That which is in Greek is attributed to Theodotion, who flourished in the time of Commodus, who was made Roman emperor in the year of Christ 180. But it must be much more ancient; for Clemens Romanus, in his Epistle to the Corinthians (which was wrote near one hundred and twenty years before,) brings a quotation out of it. The Syriac translation was made from the Greek, and so was also the English, which we at present have among the apocryphal writings in our Bible. And it is to be observed, that all these three versions, last mentioned, have several particulars which are not in Jerome's; and some of these seem to be of those various readings, which he professeth to have cut off as corruptions of the text; and particularly that which is added in the thirteenth verse of the first chapter appears to bo of this sort: for there the battle of Ragau is placed in the seventeenth year of Nabuchodonosor, which is directly contradictory to what is in the former part of the ,same chapter; for there it is positively said, that it was 1 Judith ii. 2 Ibid. i. 2. 3 Ibid. i. I. 4 Ibid. i. 7— JO. 5 Ibid. i. I. 2. 0 Hieronymi Prxratio in Librum Judith. 84 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF in the twelfth year of his reign. And, agreeably hereto, Jerome's version placeth the expedition of Holofernes (that was the next year after) in the thir- teenth year of Nebuchodonosor, which is the truth of the matter; whereas the other,, following the blunder of the former contradiction, makes another, by placing it in the eighteenth year of his reign, and so renders that part of the history wholly inconsistent with itself. And, therefore, certainly, in this particular, Jerome's version is to be preferred, which gives good reason to think that it ought to be so in all the rest, wherever there is any difference between them. But stiU, whether the book be a true or a feigned history, is what learned men are not agreed in. The Romanists will have it all to be true; for they have re- ceived it into the canon of divine writ. But, on the other hand, it is the opinion of Grotius,' that it is wholly a parabolical fiction, written in the time of Antiochus Epiphanes, when he came into Judea, to raise a persecution against the Jewish church; and that the design of it was to confirm the Jews under that persecution in their hopes that God would send them a deliverance: " That therein, by Ju- dith is meant Judea; by Bethulia, the temple, or house of God; and by the sword, which went out from thence, the prayers of the saints; that Nebuchodonosoi doth there denote the devil; and the kingdom of Assyria the devil's kingdom — pride; that by Holofernes is there meant the instrument or agent of the devil in that persecution; Antiochus Epiphanes, who made himself master of Judea, that fair widow, so called, because destitute of relief; that Eliakim signifies God, who would arise in his defence, and at length cutoff that instrument of the devil who woidd have corrupted her." This particular explication of the parable (as he wiU have it to be) is, I confess, the peculiar fancy of this great man; but other- wise there are abundance of other learned writers among the protestants, who igree with him in the general, that this book is rather a parabolical than a real flistory, made for the instructing and comforting of the people of the Jews undei that figure, and not to give them a narrative of any thing reaUy done: and their reason for it is, that they think it utterly inconsistent with all times, where if hath been endeavoured to be placed, either before or after the captivity of the Jews. My putting it in the time of Manasseh takes off aU the objections which are brought to prove its inconsistency with the times after the captivity, which, I confess, are unanswerable. But where it here stands the objections from the other part still remain; and they are these following: — 1st, That Joakim, or Eliakim (for they are acknow- ledged to be both the same name,^) is said in the history of Judith to have been then high-priest; but there is none of that name to be found, either in the scrip- tures or in Josephvis, that was high-priest before the captivity. 2dly, Achior, the Ammonite, in his speech to Holofernes, (ch. v. ver. 18.) there speaks of the temple as having been lately cast to the ground, which was not done tiU the last year of the reign of Zedekiah; and therefore, this cannot be consistent with any time before it; and the third verse of chapter the fourth, plainly puts it after the captivity: for there the text is, that the people of the Jews were newly returned from their captivity, when Holofernes invaded Judea. 3dly, The chief management of the public affairs of the state are in that book placed wholly in the high-priest, without any mention made of the king throughout the whole of it, or implying, in the least, that there was then any such government in the land; which renders it AvhoUy inconsistent with any other times than those in which there was no king in Judah. 4thly, That, in the conclusion of the book, Judith is said to have lived an hundred and five years; and that none made the children of Israel any more afraid in all her days, nor a long time after her death. But supposing her to have been forty-five years old when she went out to Holofernes (and in an older age she cannot well be supposed to have beauty enough to charm such a man) to make her an hundred and five years old, tiiere 1 III Prafationc ad Aiinotationes in Libruin Judith. 2 For they are both of the same signification, El being the name of God in one, as Jehovah is in the other and the latter part of the name is the same in both; and therefore, as Jehoiakim, or Joakim, king of Judah is called als'i Kliakiin so this high-priest is, in the version of Jerome, called promiscuously by both names. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 85 must be sixty years more added to her life, which will carry down her death to the fourth year of Zedekiah, when the state of the Jews had for several years been exceedingly disturbed by the Babylonians, and was, within a little while 'after, totally subverted by them; which makes both her life and death absolutely mconsistent with the times in which they are above placed. To the first of these objections it may be answered, 1st, That though there be no such person as Joakim, or Eliakim, named in scripture to have been high- priest before the captivity, yet this is no argument but that there might have oeen such a one; for the scripture no where professeth to give us an exact cata- logue of all such as had been high-priests till the captivity. That which looks most like it is what we have in the sixth chapter of the first book of Chronicles But that is only a direct lineal descent of the pontifical family from Aaron to J s^adak, the son of Seraiah, who was-high priest at the captivity, and not a. catalogue of such as had borne the pontifical office; for several are in that pedi- gree who never were high-priests, and several are left out that were. The high- priests of the family of Eli are instances of the latter; for they are left out of that pedigree, though they were high-priests: and those of the true race, who were excluded by them, are instances of the former; for they are in it though they never were high-priests. And it is very likely, that, from the time of Solomon to the captivity, many more such instances might have happened to hinder that pedigree from being an exact catalogue of the high-priests: for, on the minority, or some other unqualifying defect of the right heir, the next colla- teral must have been admitted to the office, whose name could not come into the pedigree; and, on the faihng of an elder branch (as might have happened,) the heir of the next collateral branch must have come into the office; and then the ancestors of the collateral successor must be in the pedigree, though they never had been in the office; and those of the elder branch, though they had been in the office, could not be in the pedigree, because it had failed. For it is only the pedigree of Josadak, the son of Seraiah, who was high-priest at the captivity, which is in a direct line from Aaron, that is given us in the sixth chapter of the first book of Chronicles: and it being the usage of the Jews in their pedigrees to pass from a remote ancestor to a remote descendant, by leav- ing out those who are between, of which abundance of instances may be given in scripture, it is possible this also might have happened in this case. And thus much is certain, that four high-priests named in scripture are not in that pedigree; i. e. Jehoiada, and Zachariah his son, who were high-priests in the reign of Joash; Azariah, who was high-priest in the reign of Uzziah; and Uri- jah, who was high-priest in the reign of Ahaz, kings of Judah. There are indeed two Azariahs named in that pedigree, besides the Azariah who was the father of Seraiah; but neither of these two could be the Azariah that was high- priest in the time of Uzziah: for Amariah,' the son of the last of the said two Azariahs in that pedigree, was high-priest in the time of Jehosai:)hat, five gene- rations before. As to the pedigrees of the high-priests in Ezra and Nehemiah, they are but imperfect parts of that which we have in the sixth chapter of the first book of Chronicles. As for the catalogue of Josephus, it is so corrupted, that scarce five of the names in it agree with any thing that we have in scripture. And, therefore, putting all this together, Joakim or Eliakim might have been high-priest in the time of Manasseh, though there be no mention of him as such, by either of his names, either in the holy scriptures, or in the history of Josephus. But, 2ndly, That this Joakim or Eliakim (for both, as hath beeii be- fore observed, is the same name) is not named in scripture is not certainly true: for there are some who will have Eliakim, the son of Hilkiah, that is before spoken of, to have been the person, and understand what is said in Isa. xxii. 21. of the robe and the girdle, which he was to put on, as meant of the pontifical robe and girdle; and therefore infer from hence, that he was high-priest; md St. Jerome- and St. Cyril, among the ancients, both were of this opinion. Aad, 1 2Chron. xix. 11. 2 In Esaiam xxii. 86 * CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF it must be said, that what is there prophesied of him by Isaiah that God woulJ commit the government of the state to his hands, in the room of Shebna, who was chief minister before him; and that he should be a father to the inhabitants , of Jerusalem, and to the house of Judah; and that the key of the house of Da- vid should be laid upon his shoulder, to open and to shut without control, as he should think fit, doth very well agree with that part which Joakim is said to have acted in the book of Judith. But that he was the same person is what i durst not from that, which is brought to prove it, lay much stress upon; neithei is there any need of it for the satisfying of this objection, what I have else said being sufficient for it. Jndly, As to the objection from ch. iv. 3. of Judith, and from the speech of Achior (ch. v. 18,) the words on which they are founded are not in Jerome's .version; and therefore, it is most likely they were put into the Greek versiop (from whence the English is taken) from some of those corrupted copies of the original which Jerome complains of: for in his version (which he made from the best corrected copies of the original Chaldee,) ver. 3. of chap. iv. is wholly left out, as are also those words of ch. v. 18. which speak of the temple's having been cast to the ground. And although there be words still remaining .in Je- rome's version, as well as in our English, which speak of the captivity and dis- persion of the Jews, and their late restoration again to their own land; yet thej are none other than what may be understood of the Assyrian captivity, in the time of Manasseh, than of the Babylonish which happened afterward. As to the third objection, it is possible Manasseh might be then engaged in the defence of some other part of his kingdom, and therefore had intrusted Joakim with the management of all affairs at Jerusalem during his abscence. And if he were the Eliakim mentioned in the twenty-second chapter of Isaiah, and, as chief minister of state, was then invested with all that amplitude of trust and power as is there described, that might be reason enough for him only to be made men- tion of in this transaction, without naming of his master at all therein. But, lastly. To give a satisfactory answer to the fourth objection, I must con- fess is not in my power. Could we put this history so far back as the minorit;' of Manasseh, this would not only afford us an answer to this objection, but would also give us a much clearer one to the last proceeding. For then there would be reason enough not to mention the minor king, but only the chief minister and guardian of the kingdom, in the transacting of the whole affair: and the death of Judith would, on this supposition, be at such a distance from the destruction of the Jewish state, as not to make this objection unanswerable. But the Avick- edness of the pupil will not allow him to have been bred under so good a man for his governor, as Eliakim is described to be. And what is said in the eigh- teenth and nineteenth verses of the fifth chapter of Judith, concerning the cap- tivity and restoration of the Jews, and is retained also in Jerome's version, must necessarily refer the matters therein related to those times which followed the captivity of Manasseh, and the restoration of him and his people again to their own land. And the chronology of this history will not permit the beginning of it to fall any where else, but in the twelfth year of Saosduchinus, and the last of Deioces; and these two characters of the time exactly concurring, according to Herodotus and Ptolemy, do unavoidably determine us to fix it here. However, our not being able to clear this difficulty, is not a sufficient reason for us to reject the whole history. There is scarce any history written, but what to the next age after may appear, as to time, place, and other circumstances, with those seeming inconsistencies, as cannot then be easily reconciled, when the memory of men begin to fail concerning them. And how much more, then, may we be apt tc blunder, when we take our view at the distance of above two thousand years, and have no other light to discern the so far distant object by, than such glimmerings from broken scraps of history, as leave us next door to groping in the dark for whatsoever knowledge we get by them? That which seemeth most probable iu this case is, that the writer of this book, the more to magnify his heroine, attri- THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 87 buted too long a continuance to that peace, which was by her obtained for the land: for, according to this account, it must have lasted at least eighty years;' which being what they never had enjoyed from the time they were a nation, or what scarce any other nation ever had, I would rather choose to allow a fiction in this particular, than for the sake of it condemn the whole book as such, which seemeth to carry with it the heir of a true history in all other particulars. However, I must acknowledge, that what is above said in the defence of this book, for its being a true history, doth not so far clear the matter, especially in respect of the fourth objection, but that if any one wiU still contend that it is only a religious romance, and not a true history; that, according to the intention of the author, the scene of it was put under the reign of Xerxes, when Joakim, the son of Joshua, was high-priest,' and the civil government of Judea as well as the ec- clesiastical, was in the hands of that officer; and that the inconsistency of so many particulars in that book, with the state and transactions of those times, was only from the ignorance of the author in the history of the said times, and his unskilfulness in placing the scene of his story in them; I say, if any one will in- sist on all this, notwithstanding what is above said, I shall not enter into any con- troversy with him about it; only thus much I must insist on, that if it be a true history (which I am inclined most to think, though I will not be positive in it,) it can fall no where else, but in the time where I have laid it. After the death of Deioces, Phraortes his son succeeded in the kingdom of Me- dia', and reigned over it twenty-two years. An. 648. Manas. 51.] — In the fifty-first year of Manasseh, died Saosduchinus. king of Babylon and Assyria,"* and Chyniladanus reigned in his stead. An. 644. Manas. 55.] — Manasseh, king of Judah, after he had reigned fifty- five years, and lived sixty-seven, died at Jerusalem;^ and, notwithstanding his signal repentance, since his former wickedness had been so great, they would not allow him the honour of being buried in the sepulchres of the sons of David, but laid him in a grave made for him in his own garden. An. 64-3. Ammon 1.] — After Manasseh reigned Ammon his son; who, imitat- ing the first part of his father's reign, rather than the latter, gave himself up to all manner of wickedness and impiety; whereon the servants of his house con- spired against him, and slew him, after he had reigned two years. But the peo- ple of the land severely revenged the murder, putting them all to death that had any hand in it. However, they would not give him in his burial the honour of a place among the sepulchres of the sons of David, but buried him in the garden by his father; which shows, that though they condemned the wickedness of his reign, they would not allow of the violence that was offered to his person; though it may well be supposed, that nothing less than the highest tyranny ana oppression could have provoked his own domestics to it. An. 640. Josiah 1.] — After the death of Ammon, Josiah his son succeeoed him in the kingdom,^ being then but eight years old. But having the happiness to fall under the conduct of better guardians in his minority than did Manasseh his grandfather, he proved, when grown up, a prince of very extraordinary ^ worth; equalling in piety, virtue, and goodness, if not exceeding herein, the best of his predecessors. Although Ammon reigned but two years, yet the beginning of the reign of Josiah is here put at the distance of three years from the beginning of the first year of Ammon, because the odd months of the reign of Hezekiah, Manasseh, and Ammon, over and above the round number of years, which they are said to have reigned, do by this time amount to a whole year more, which the chro- nology of the ensuing history makes necessary to be here supposed. An. 635. Josiah 6.] — In the sixth year of Josiah, Phraortes,' king of Media, 1 For allowing liur to liavo biien forty-five yoars old at tlK; time of her killin<; Ilolofernes, tlu^ro inusl be sixty years after to the time of her death, and " a long time after" in the text (Jndith xvi. 2.5.) cannot imply less than twenty years more. But if we suppose her to be but twenty-five at the killing of Ilolofernes (which is more likely,) it will carry down the computation even beyond the destruction of Jerusalem, which makei> the objection much stronger. 2 Neh. xii. 10. 20. 3 Herodotus, lib. 1. 4 Canon I'tolenia-i. 3 2 Kings x.vi. 18. 2 Chron. xxiii. 20. 6 2 Kings xxii 2 Chroii. xx.\iv. 7 Herodotus, lib. 1. 88 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF having brought under him all the Upper Asia (which is all that lay north f Mount Taurus, from Media to the River Halys,) and made the Persians als lo become subject unto him, elated his thoughts on these successes, to the rcvenj-- ing of himself upon the Assyrians for his father's death, and accordingly march id with a great army against them, and having made himself master of Sie c untry, laid siege to Nineveh itself, the capital of the empire. But he had there the misfortune to meet with the same iU fate that his father had in the former w"r; for, being overthrown in the attempt, he and all his army perished in it. An. 633. Josiah 8.] — Josiah, in the eighth year of his reign,' being now six- teen years old, took on him the administration of the kingdom; and beginning with the reformation of religion, endeavoured to purge it of all those corruptions which had been introduced in the time of Ammon and Manasseh, his father and grandfather; and did set his heart to seek the Lord his God with all his might as did David his father. Cyaxares, the son of Phraortes,^ having succeeded his father in the kingdom of Media, as soon as he had well settled himself in the government, drew to- gether a great army to be revenged on the Assyrians for the late loss, and, hav- ing overthrown them in a great battle, led the Medes the second time to the siege of Nineveh; but, before he could make any progress therein, he was called oiF to defend his own territories against a new enemy. For the Scythians, from the parts about the Palus Meotis, passing round the Caucases, had made a great inroad upon them; Avhereby he was forced to leave Nineveh to march against them. But he had not the same success in this war, which he had against the Assyrians: for the Scythians, having vanquished him in battle, dispossessed him of all the Upper Asia, and reigned there twenty-eight years: during which time, they enlarged their conquests into Syria, and as far as the borders of Egypt But there Psammitichus, king of Egypt, having met them, prevailed with en- treaties and large gifts, that they proceeded no farther; and thereby saved his country from this dangerous invasion. In this expedition, they seized on Beth- shean,^ a city in the territories of the tribe of Manasseh on this side Jordan, and kept it as long as they continued in Asia; and therefore from them it was after- ward called Scythopolis, or the city of the Scythians. But how far the ravages of these baibarians might affect Judea, is no where said, although there can be no doubt but that those parts, as well as the rest of Palestine, both in their march to the borders of Egypt, and also in their return from thence, must have suffered much by them. It is related of them, that in their passage through the land of the Philistines, on their return from Egypt, some of the stragglers robbed the temple of Venus at Askalon,'' and that for the punishment hereof they and their posterity were afflicted with emrods for a long Mobile after; which lets us know, that the Philistines had till then still preserved the memory of what they had formerly suffered on the account of the ark of God.^ For, from that time, it seems, they looked on this disease as the proper punishment from the hand of God, for all such like sacrilegious impieties; and, for this reason, assigned it to ^he Scythians in their histories, on their charging of them there with this crime. An. 629. Josiah 12.] — Josiah, in the twelfth year of his reign," being now twenty years old, and having farther improved himself in the knowledge of God and his laws, proceeded according thereto farther to perfect that reformation which he had begun. And therefore, making a strict inquiry, by a general progress through the land, after all the relics of idolatry which might be any Avhere re- maining therein, he broke down all the altars of Baalim with the idols erected on high before them, and all the high places, and cut down the groves, and brake in pieces all the carved images, and the molten images, and digged up the graves of the idolatrous priests, and burned their bones upon all places of idolatrous worship, thereby to pollute and defile them for ever; and when he had thus cleansed all Judah and Jerusalem, he went into the cities of Ephraim and Ma~ 1 2 Chron. xxxiv. 3. 2 Herodotus, lib. 1. 3 Syncellus, p. 214. 4 5 HerodotuT, lib. 1, 5 1 Sam. V. 6 2 Chron. xxziv. 3—5, &c. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 89 nasseh, and all the rest of the land, that had formerly been possessed by the ten tribes of Israel (for all this was then subject to him,) and there did the same thing. An. 6-28. Josiah 13.] — In the thirteenth year of Josiah,' Jeremiah was called to the prophetic office, which he afterward executed for above forty years, in warning Judah and Jerusalem of the wrath of God impending on them for their iniquities, and in calling them to repentance for the averting of it: till at length, on their continuing wholly obdurate in their evil ways, it was poured out in full measure upon both in a most calamitous destruction. Jin. fr20. Josiah 15.] — In the fifteenth year of Josiah, Chyniladanus, king of Babylon and Assyria, having, by his effeminacy and unprofitableness in the state, made himself contemptible to his people, Nabopollasar,- who was general of his army, took this advantage to set up for himself, and being a Babylonian by birth, made use of his interest there to seize that part of the Assyrian em- pire, and reigned king of Babylon twenty-one years. An. 6:^3. Josiah 18.] — Josiah, in the eighteenth year of his reign, ^ took espe- cial care for the repairing of the house of God, and therefore sent several of the chief officers of his court to take an account of the money collected for it, and to lay his command upon Hilkiah the high-priest, that he should see it forthwith laid out in the doing of the work, so that all might be put in tho- rough repair. The high-priest, in pursuance of this order, took a general view of the house, io see whac was necessary to oe done; and, while he was thus examining every place, he found the authentic copy of the law of Moses. This ought to have been laid up on the side of the ark of the covenant in the most holy place;* but it was taken out thence, and hid elsewhere in the time of Manasseh, as it is conjectured, that it might not be destroyed by him in the time of his iniquity. This book Hilkiah sent to the king by Shaphan the scribe, who, on his delivering of it to the king, did by his command read some part of it to him. The place which, on the opening of the book, he happened on, was (say the Jewish doctors) that part of the twenty-eighth chapter of Deu- teronomy, wherein are denounced the curses of God against the people of Is- rael, and against the king in particular (verse 26,) in case they should not keep the law which he had commanded them. On the hearing of this, Josiah rent his clothes through grief, and was seized with great fear and consternation, on the account both of himself and his people, as knowing how much they and their fathers had transgressed this law, and dreading the curses denounced against them for it. To ease his mind under this trouble and anxiety of his thoughts, he sent Hilkiah the high-priest, with several of his officers to Hul- dah the prophetess, to inquire of the Lord. The answer which they brough. back was a sentence of destruction upon Judah and Jerusalem; but that as tc Josiah, because of his repentance, the execution of it should be delayed till after his days. However, the good king, to appease the wrath of God as much as lay in his power, called together a solemn assembly of all the elders, and people of Judah and Jerusalem; and, going up with them to the temple, caused the law of God to be there read to them, and after that both king and people publicly entered into a solemn covenant to walk after tlie Lord, and to keep his commandments, and his testimonies, and his statutes, with ah their heart and all their soul; and to perform all the words of the convenant tha* were written in that book. And after this he made another progress through the land, to purge it of all other abominations of idolatry or other wickedness, which might be still remaining in it, which he thoroughly rooted ou.. in all parts of his kingdom in such manner, as is in the twenty-third chapter of the second book of Kings at large related. And particularly he destroyed the altu- and high place, which Jeroboam liad built at Bethel, first polluting them by burning on them the bones of men, taken out of their sepulchres near adjoin- 1 Jer. i. 2. xxv. 3. 2 Alexander I'olyhistor apud Eusebium in Chronico, p. 46, et apud Syncelliim, p. 310. 3 2 Kings xxii. 2 Cliron. xxxiv. 4 Deut. sxxi. 26. Vol. L— 12 90 CONNEXION OF TH£ HISTORY OF ing, and then* breaking down the altar aiid burning the high place and the grove, and stamping them all to powder; whereby he fulfilled what had been prophesied of him by name many ages before in the time of Jeroboam.' And he did the same in all the rest of the cities of Samaria, destroying every re- mainder of idolatry which he could any where find in any of them. And when the next passover approached, he caused that feast to be kept with so great a solemnity and concourse of people, from all parts of the land, that it not only exceeded the passover of Hezekiah, which is before mentioned, but all other passovers, from the days of Samuel the prophet to that time. By the behaviour both of the high-priest, as well as of the king, at the finding of the book of the law, it plainly appears that neither of them had seen any copy of it before; which shows into how corrupt a state the church of the Jews was then sunk, till this good king reformed it: for although Hezekiah kept scribes on purpose to collect together and write out copies of the holy scriptures,^ yet, through the iniquity of the times that after followed in the reigns of Manasseh and Ammon, they had either been so destroyed, or else so neglected and lost, that there were then none of them left in the land, unless in some few private hands, where they were kept up and concealed till this copy was found in the temple; ■ and therefore, after this time (by the care, we may be assured, of this religious prince,) were written out those copies of the law and other holy scriptures then in being, which were preserved after the captivity, and out of which Ezra made his edition of them, in such a manner, as wiU be hereafter related. • All. 617. Josiah 24.] — In the twenty-fourth year of Josiah,^ died Psammiti- chus, king of Egypt, after he had reigned fifty-four years, and w'as succeeded Dy Necus his son, the same who in scripture is called Pharoah Necho, and often mentioned there under that name. He made an attempt to join the Nile and the Red Sea, by drawing a canal from the one to the other; but after he had consumed an hundred and twenty thousand men in the work, he was forced to desist from it. But he had better success in another undertaking; for, having gotten some of the expertest of the Phoenician sailors into his service, he sent them out by the Red Sea through the Straits of Babelmandel, to discover the coasts of Africa;'' who, having sailed round it, came home the third year through the Straits of Gibraltar and the Mediterranean Sea, which was a very extraordi- nary voyage to be made in those days, when the use of the loadstone was not known. This voyage was performed about two thousand one hundred years before Vasquez de Gama, a Portuguese, by discovering the Cape of Good Hope, A. D. 1497, found out the same way from hence to the Indies, by which these Phoenicians came from thence. Since that, it hath been made the common passage thither from all these western parts of the world. An. 612. Josiah 29.] — In the twenty -ninth year of the reign of Josiah, which was the twenty-third of Cyaxares in the kingdom of Media,^ Nabopollasar, king of Babylon, having made an affinity with Astyages, the eldest son of Cyaxares, by the marriage of Nebuchadnezzar, his son, with Amyitis, the daughter of Astyages, entered into a confederacy with him against the Assyrians; and, thereon oining their forces together, they besieged Nineveh; and after having taken the )lace and slain Saracus the king (who was either the successor of Chyniladanus, r he himself under another name,) to gratify the Medes, they utterly destroyed -hat great and ancient city; and from that time Babylon became the sole me- ropolis of the Assyrian empire. From the time that Esarhaddon obtained the dngdom of Babylon," both cities equally had this honour, the kings sometimes •esiding at Nineveh, and sometimes at Babylon; but after this Nineveh lost it 'or ever; for, although there was another city afterward erected out of the ruins of old Nineveh, which for a long time bore the same name, yet it never attained to the grandeur and glory of the former. It is at this day called Mosul,^ and 1 1 KiiiKs xiii. 2. 2 Prov. xxv. 1. 3 Heiodot. lib. 1. 4 Ibid. lib. 4. 5 Eusebii Chroiiicon, p. 124. Alexander Polyliistor apud Syncellum, p. 210. et apud Eusebiuin in Chronico. Herodotus, lib. 1. C Strabo, lib. 16. p. 734. 7 Thevenot's Travels, part 2. book 1. c. U. p. 50. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 91 is only famous for being the seat of the patriarch of the Nestorians, of which sect are most of the Christians in those parts. It is situated on the west side of the River Tigris, where was anciently only a suburb of the old Nineveh; for the city itself stood on the east side of the river, where are to be seen some of its ruins of great extent even unto this day. According to Diodorus Sicuius,' the circuit of Nineveh was four hundred and eighty furlongs, which made sixty of our miles. And hence it is, that it is said in Jonah to be a city of three days' journey," that i-s, in compass; for twenty miles is as much as a man can w^ell go in one day. Strabo^ saith of it, that it was much bigger than Babylon; and in the same place he tells us, that the circuit of Babylon was three hundred and eighty-five furlongs, that is, forty-eight of our miles. The phrase, much bigger may well extend to the other twelve miles to make it up sixty. In this destruction of Nineveh was fulfilled the prophecies of Jonah,'' Nahum,* and Zephaniah,* against it. And we are told in the book of Tobit," that Tobias his son lived to hear of it, and that it was accomplished by Nabuchodonosor and Assuenis, which exactly agrees with the account which, out of Alexander Polyhistor, I have j ust aboved given of it. For that the Assuerus here mentioned was Astyages, appears from Daniel; for Darius the Mede, who w'as Cyaxares, the son of Astyages, is there called the son of Ahasuerus,* and Nabuchodonosor , was the name among the Babylonians commonly given to their kings, as that of Pharaoh was among the Egyptians. And that NabopoUasar in particular was so called, not only appears from the rabbinical writings of the Jews," but also from Josephus himself, a writer, by reason of his antiquity, of much better authority in this matter. For, in his Antiquities, where he is speaking of this same king, he calls him in a quotation,'" which is there brought out of Berosus, by the name of Nabuchodonosor; and afterward, in his book against Apion," repeating the same quotation, he there calls him Nabolassar, the same by con- traction with NabopoUasar; which plainly proves him to have been called by both these names. I know there are those who take upon them, from this pas- sage in the book against Apion, to mend that in the Antiquities, and put Nabo- poUasar in botfi places; but I see no reason for it but their own fancy. Others may, with as good authority, from the passage in the Antiquities, mend that in the book against Apion, and put Nabuchodonosor in both places. It is certain, (he books of Tobit and Judith can never be reconciled with any other ancient writings, either sacred or profane, which relate to those times, unless W'e allow Nabuchodonosor to have been a name common to the kings of Babylon. The archbishop of Armagh'- hath put this destruction of Nineveh fourteen years earlier, that is, in the last year of Chyniladanus in the Canon of Ptolemy, for no other reason, I suppose, but that he reckoned that the end of his life, and the end of his reign in that canon, happened both at the same time, and both together in the destruction of that city: whereas, the computation of that canon being by the years of the kings that reigned at Babylon, Chyniladanus's reign there must end where Nabopollassar's begun, whether he then died or no, as it is most probable he did not, but that he continued to hold the kingdom of Assy- ria after he had lost that of Babylon, and that it was not tiU some time after that loss that Nineveh was destroyed: for Eusebius placeth the destruction of Nine- veh in the twenty-third year of the reign of Cyaxares; and to put it back four- teen years, to the last of Chyniladanus in the canon, will make it fall in the ninth year of Cyaxares, which is too early either for his son Astyages to have a daugh- ter marriageable, or for Nebuchadnezzar to be of age sufficient to take her to wife: for, after this rate, Nebuchadnezzar must be allowed to have been at the 1 I'ib. 2. 2 Jonah iii. 3. 3 I,il). Hi. p. TM. 4 Chap. iii. 5 Chap. ii. and iii. 6 Chap. ii. 13. 7 cUap. .xiv. 15. 8 Daniel i.\. 1. 9 In Jiichasin, Nehiichadnczzar is called Nebuchadnezzar the son of Nebuchadnezzar, fol. ISO. ^nd Dari^ Ganz, under the year of ihe world 3285, calls the father Nebuchadnezzar the first, and the son Nebuchad nezzar the second. 10 Josephus Antiq. lib. 10. c. U. \\ Lib. I. 12 In Annalibus Veteris Testament! sub anno mundi. 92 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF least t^ighty-five years old at the time of his death/ and Astyages much older, wb:oh is an age very unlikely for such to live, who usually waste their Uves, both by luxury and fatigue, much faster than other men. At the destruction of this city of Nineveh ended the book of Tobit. It was first written in Chaldee by some Babylonian Jew,- and seems, in its original drauo-ht, to have been the memoirs of the family to which it relates; first beo-un by Tobit, then continued by Tobias, and lastly finished by some other of the family, and afterward digested by the Chaldee author into that form in which we now have it. Jerome translated it out of the Chaldee into Latin,' and his trans- lation is that which we have in the vulgar Latin edition of the Bible. But there is a Greek version much ancienter than this; for we find it made use of by Poly- carp, Clemens Alexandrianus, and other fathers who were before Jerome; and from this hath been made the Syriac version, and also that which we have in EngUsh among the apocryphal writers in our Bible: but the Chaldee original is not now extant. The Hebrew copies which go about of this book, as well as of that of Judith, seem both to be of a modern composure.* It being easier to set- tle the chronology of this book than that of the book of Judith, it hath met with much less opposition fron^ learned men, and is generally looked on, both by Jews and Christians, as a genuine and true history; though as to some matters in it (as particularly that of the angel's accompanying of Tobias in a long journey under the shape of Azarias, the story of Raguel's daughter, the frighting away of the devil by the smoke of the heart and liA^er of a fish, and the curing of Tobit's blindness by the gaU of the same fish,) it is much less reconcileable to a rational credibility: for these things look more like the fictions of Homer than the writings of a sacred historian, and give an objection against this book which doth not lie against the other. However, it may excellently well serve to repre- sent unto us the duties of charity and patience, in the example of Tobit's ready helping his brethren in distress to the utmost of his power, and his bearing with a pious submission the calamities of his captivity, poverty, and blindness, as long as inflicted upon him. The Latin and Greek Aversions of this book, which I have mentioned, do much differ, each having some particulars in it which are wanting in the other. But here the Latin version must give place to the Greek. For Jerome made it^ before he himself understood Chaldee, by the help of a learned Jew, from whose mouth he tells us, he wrote down in Latin what the othei rendered into Hebrew from the original, and in this manner finished the whole work in one day's time: and a work so done must undoubtedly have abun- dance of mistakes as weU as inaccuracies in it. But his translation of Judith was made afterward,® when, by his farther studies in the oriental languages he had rendered himself as much master of the Chaldee as he was before of the Hebrew; and he did it with great care, comparing diligently many A^arious copies, and making use only of such as he found to be the best; and therefore his Aver- sion of that book may weU deserve an authority beyond the Greek, Avhich can- not be claimed for the other. If the copy which Jerome translated his Tobit from were a true copy, and he were not mistaken in the version, there is one passage in it which absolutely overthrows the whole authority of the book: for (ch. xiv. 7,) there is mention made of the temple of Jerusalem as then burnt and destroyed, which makes the whole of it utterly inconsistent with the times in which it is placed; the Greek version, as also the English, which is taken from it, I acknowledge, speaks only prophetically of it, as of that which was to be done, and not historically, as of that which was already done, as Jerome's doth. However, this Latin edition is that which the church of Rome hath canon- ized. If the historical ground-plot of the book be true, which is the most that 1 For, according to this account, this marriage must have been twenty-one yeara before Nebuchadneaaa began to reign, and he reigned forty-three years; and it must also have been tliirty-one years before Astyagei •egan to reign, and he reigned thirty years. S Prtefatio Hieronymi in Tobiam. 3 Hieronymi PrEefatio in Tobiam. 4 They are generally thought to have been made by Munster. 5 Hieronymi Prse/atio in Tobiam. 6 Hieronymi Frsefatio in Librum Judith. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 93 can be said of it, yet certainly it is interlarded with many fictions of the inven- tion of him that wrote it. The Babylonians and the Medes having thus destroyed Nineveh, as is above related, they became so formidable hereon, as raised the jealousy of all their neighbours; and therefore, to put a stop to their growing greatness, Necho, king of Egypt,' in the thirty-first year of king Josiah, maixhed with a great army toward the Euphrates to make war upon them. The words of Josephus are, " That it was to make war upon the Medes and Babylonians, who had dissolv- ed the Assyrian empire;"' which plainly shows, that this war was commenced immediately upon that dissolution, and consequently, that the destruction of Nineveh, whereby this dissolution was brought to pass, was just before thif war, in the year where, according to Eusebius, I have placed it. An. 610. Josiah 31.] — On Necho's taking his way through Judea, Josiah re- solved to impede his march;^ and, therefore, getting together his forces, he posted himself in the valley of Megiddo, there to stop his passage: whereon Necho sent ambassadors unto him, to let him know that he had no design upon him; that the war he was engaged in was against others; and, therefore, ad- vised him not to meddle with him, lest it should turn to his hurt. But Josiah not hearkening thereto, on Necho's marching up to the place where he wa? posted to stop his passage, it there came to a battle between them; wherein Jo- siah was not only overthrown, but also unfortunately received a wound, of which, on his return to Jerusalem, he there died, after he had reigned thirty-one years. It is the notion of many, that Josiah engaged rashly and unadvisedly in this ^?ar, upon an over confidence in the merit of his own righteousness; as if (Jod, f(.rr this reason, must necessarily have given him success in every war which hi- should engage himself in. But this would be a presumption very unworthy of so religious a person. There was another reason that engaged him in this undertaking, which hath been above hinted at. From the time of Manasseh's restoration, the kings of Judah were homagers to the kings of Babylon, and bound by oath to adhere to them against all their enemies, especially against the Egyptians, and to defend that border of their empire against them; and for this purpose, they seem to have had conferred on them the rest of the land of Ca- naan, that which had formerly been possessed by the other ten tribes, tiU con- quered from them by the Assyrians. It is certain Josiah had the whole land of Israel in the same extent in which it had been held by David and Solomon, be- fore it was divided into two kingdoms. For his reformation went through all of it; and it was executed by him, not only in Bethel (where one of Jeroboam's calves stood,) but also in every other part thereof, and with the same sovereign authority as in Judea itself; and, therefore, he must have been king of the whole. And it is to be remarked, that the battle was fought not within the ter- ritories of Judea, but at Megiddo, a town of the tribe of Manasseh, lying in the middle of the kingdom of Israel, where Josiah would have had nothing to do, had he not been king of that kingdom also, as well as of the other of Judah, and he could have had it no otherwise but by grant from the king of Babylon, a province of whose empire it was made by the conquest of it, first begun by Tiglath-Pileser, and afterward finished by Salmaneser and Esarhaddon. And if this grant was not upon the express conditions which I have mentioned, yet whatsoever other terms there were of this concession, most certainly fidelity to the sovereign paramount, and a steady adherence to his interest against all his enemies, was always required in such cases, and an oath of God exacted for the performance hereof And it is not to be doubted, but that Josiah had taken such an oath to Nabopollasar, the then reigning king of Babylon, as Jehoiakim and Zedeklah afterward did to Nebuchadnezzar, his son and successor in that empire; and, therefore, should Josiah, when under such an obUgation, have permitted an 1 Herodotus, lib. 2. Josephus Antiq. lib. 10. c. 6 2 Joeepbus Antiq. lib. 10. c. C 3 2 Kings sxxiii. 29, 30. 2 Chron. xxxv. 20—25 94 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF enemy of the king of Babylon to pass through his country to make war upon him, without any opposition, it would have plainly amounted to a breach of his oath, and a violation of that fidelity which he had in the name of his God sworn unto him, which so good and just a man, as Josiah was, could not bi't abso- lutely detest. For, although the Romanists make nothing of breaking faith with heretics, yet the breaking of faith with a heathen was condemned by God him- self in Jehoiakim and Zedekiah;' and most certainly it would have been con- demned in Josiah also, had he become guilty of it; which being what a person so well instructed in religion as Josiah was could not but be thoroughly con- vinced of, the sense which he had of his duty, in this particular, seems solely to have been that which engaged him in this war, in which he perished: and with him perished all the glory, honour, and prosperity of the Jewish nation; for after that, nothing else ensued but a dismal scene of God's judgments upon the land, till at length all Judah and Jerusalem were swallowed up by them in a woful destruction. The death of so excellent a prince was deservedly lamented by all his people, and hj none more than by Jeremiah the prophet, who had a thorough sense of the greatness of the loss, and also a full foresight of the great calamities that were afterward to follow upon the whole people of the Jews; and, therefore, while his heart was full with the view of both, he wrote a song of lamentation upon this doleful occasion," as he afterward did another upon the destruction of Jerusalem. This last is that which we still have;* the other is now extant. Megiddo, where the battle was fought, was a city in the tribe of Manasseh,* on this side Jordan, which is by Herodotus caUed Magdolum; nigh it was the town of Hadad-Rimmon, afterward called Maximianopolis:^ and, therefore, the lamentation for the death of Josiah is, in scripture, called the Lamentation of Hadad-Rimmon, in the valley of Megiddo; which was so great for this excellent prince, and so long continued, that the lamentation of Hadad-Rimmon afterward became a proverbial phrase for the expressing of any extraordinary sorrow.^ This great and general mourning of all the people of Israel for the death of h>.-i prince, and the prophet Jeremiah's joining so pathetically with them herein, shnweth in how great a reputation he was with them; which he would not have d'-served, had he engaged in this war contrary to the words of that prophet, "pdken to him from the mouth of the Lord, as the apocryphal writer of the first ijook of Esdras,' and others from him, say: for then he would have died in re- i.elUon against God, and disobedience to his command; and then, neither God's prophet nor God's people could in this case, without sinning against God, have ex- piesred so great an esteem for him as this mourning implied; and therefore this ir.ourning alone is a sufficient proof to the contrary. Besides, it is to be observ- ed, that no part of canonical scripture gives us the least intimation of it; nor can we from thence have any reason or ground to beUeve that there was any such word from the Lord by the prophet Jeremiah, or any other prophet, to recall Jo- siah fi-om this war. AU that is said of it is from the apociyphal book I have mentioned; of which it may be truly said, that where it is not a transcript from Ezra, or some other canonical scripture, it is no more than a bundle of fables, too absurd for the belief of the Romanists themselves (for they have not taken th'3 book into their canonical scripture, though they have those of Tobit and of Bel and the Dragon;) and therefore it is deserving of no man's regard in this particur.r. It is said, indeed (2 Chron. xxxv. 21,) that Necho sent messengers to Josiah, to tell him, that he was sent of God on this expedition; that God was with him in it; and that to meddle with him would be to meddle with God; and that there- fore he ought to forbear, that God destroy him not; and (ver. 22,) that Josiah hearkened not to the word of Necho, from the mouth of God. And, from all this put together, some would infer, that Josiah was disobedient to the word of I Ezek xvii. 13—19. 2 Chron. xsxv. 25. 3 Tn:p \asi. rfiforring throughout to the destruction of Jerusalem, could not be that which was wrote upon the Jputn of Josiah. ' . . . -^ * jodtua xvii. 11. Judges L 87. 5 Hieronymus, 6 Zechariah xii. 11. 7 Zechariah i. 28. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 95 God, in going to that war. But this is utterly inconsistent with the character which is given us in scripture of that rehgious and excellent prince; and there- fore what is here said must not be understood of the true God, the Lord Jeho- vah, Avho was the God of Israel, but of the Egyptian gods, whose oracles Josiah had no reason to have any regard to. For Necho, being a heathen prince, knew not the Lord Jehovah, nor ever consulted his prophets or his oracles: the Egyp- tian gods were those only which he worshipped, and whose oracles he consult- ed; and therefore when he saith he was sent of God on this expedition, ano that Cod was with him, he meant none other than his false Egyptian gods whom he served: for, wherever the word God occurs in this text, it is not ex- pressed in the Hebrew original by the word Jehovah, which is the proper name of the true God, but by the word Elohim, which, being in the plural number, i> equally applicable to the false gods of the heathens as well as to the true God who was the God of Israel; and, in the scriptures of the Old Testament, it it equally used for the expressing of the one as well as the other. For wherevej there is occasion therein to speak of those false gods, it is by the word Elohim that they are there mentioned. And, whereas it is said (ver. 2-3,) that "Josiah hearkened not to the words of Necho from the mouth of God" (and from hence it is chiefly inferred that the message which Necho sent to Josiah was truly from God,) it is to be observed, that the phrase which we render from the mouth of God, is in the Hebrew original Mippi Elohim, i. e. from the mouth of Elohim, which may be interpreted of the false gods as well as of the true God (as hath been already said,) and much rather, in this place, of the former than of the lat- ter. For wherever else through the whole Hebrew text of the holy scriptures' there is mention made of any word coming from the mouth of God, he is there mentioned by the name Jehovah, which determines it to the true God; and this is the only place in the whole Hebrew Bible where, in the use of this phrase, it is expressed otherwise, that is, by the name Elohim, and not by the name Jeho- vah; which change in the phrase, in this place, is a sufficient proof to me that there must be here a change in the signification also, and that the word, which is here said to come from the mouth of Elohim, is not the same with the word which is, every where else, in the use of this phrase in scripture, said to come from the mouth of Jehovah, but that Elohim must, in this place, signify the false gods of the Egyptians; and that from their false oracles only Necho had this word which he sent to Josiah. For what had he to do with any word from the true God, who knew him not, nor ever worshipped him? Or how could any such revelation come to him, who knew not any of his prophets, or ever consulted them? And therefore, most certainly, the word which is here said to come Mippi Elohim, i. e. from the mouth of Elohim, must be understood only of Necho's Elohim, that is, of those false Egyptian gods whose oracles he consulted before "" e undertook this expedition, as it was then usual with heathen princes, on such •■.•.^asions, to consult the false deluding oracles of the gods they worshipped. And had it been here Mippi Jehovah, i. e. from the mouth of Jehovah, instead M' Mippi Elohim, considering who sent the message, it would not have much ir.ended the matter; for Josiah would have had no reason to believe it from such a messenger. When Sennacherib came up against Judah, he. sent Hezekiah word, that the Lord (Jehovah in the Hebrew) said unto him,- "Go up against this land, and destroy it." But it was not reckoned a fault in Hezekiah, that he believed him not, neither could it be reckoned a fault in Josiah for doing the same. For it is certain, that Sennacherib, in so pretending, Hed to king Hezekiah; and why might not Josiah then have as good reason to conclude that Necho, in the like pi-etence, might have lied also unto him? for God used not to send his word to his servants by such messengers. But Necho's pretence was not so large as Sennacherib's: for Sennacherib pretended to be sent by Jehovah, the certain name of the true God, but Necho pretended to be sent only by Elohim, which 1 See Deut. viii. 3. Josh. ix. 14. I Kings xiii. 21. 2 Chron. xxxvi. 12. Isa. i. 20. xl. 5. Iviii. 14. liii. 2, ler. IX. 12. xxiii. IG. Micah iv. 4 2 2 Kings xviii. 25. Isa. xxxvi. 10. ye CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF may be interpreted of his false Egyptian gods as well as of the true God. And it seems clear he could mean none other than the former by that word in this text; and therefore Josiah could not be liable to any blame, in not hearkening to any words which came from them. After tlie death of Josiah, the people of the land took Jehoahaz^ his son, who was also called Shidlum, and made him king in his stead. He was much unlike his father, for he did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord, and therefore he was soon tumbled down from his throne into a prison, where he ended his days, with misery and disgrace, in a strange land. For Pharaoh-Necho having had the good success," in this expedition, to beat the Babylonians at the Euphrates; and having thereon taken Charchemis, a great city in those parts, and secured it to himself with a good garrison, after three months returned again toward Egypt, and hearing in his way that Jehoahaz had taken upon him to be king of Judah without his consent, he sent for him to Riblah in Syria,^ and on his arrival caused him to be put in chains, and sent him prisoner into Egypt, where he died; and then proceeding on in his way, came to Jerusalem, where he made Jehoiakim,* another of the sons of Josiah, king, instead of his brother, and put the land to an annual tribute of an hundred talents of silver, and a talent of gold;^ and after that returned with great triumph into his own kingdom. Herodotus, making mention of this expedition of Necho's, and also of the bat- tle which he fought at Megiddo (or Magdolum, as he calleth it,) saith,^ that, after the victory there obtained by him, he took the great city Cadytis, which city he aflerward describes to be a mountainous city in Palestine, of the bigness of Sar- dis in Lydia, the chief city of all Lesser Asia in those times; by which descrip- tion this city Cadytis could be none other than Jerusalem; fw that is situated in the mountains of Palestine, and there was then no other city in those parts which could be equalled to Sardis but that only: and it is certain, from scripture, that after this battle Necho did take Jerusalem; for he was there when he made Je- hoiakim king." There is, I confess, no mention of this name, either in the scrip- tures or in Josephus: but that it Avas however called so, in the time of Herodo- tus, by the Syrians and Arabians, doth appear from this, that it is called by them, and all tlie eastern nations, by no other name but one of the same original, and the same signification, even to this day; for Jerusalem is a name now altogether as strange among them as Cadytis is to us. They all call it by the name of Al- kuds,^ which signifies the same that Cadytis doth, that is. The Holy: for, from the time that Solomon built the temple at Jerusalem, and it was thereby made to all Israel the common place of their religious worship, this epithet of The Holy was commonly given unto it; and therefore we find it thenceforth called, in the sacred writings of the Old Testament, Air Hakkodesh,^ i. e. the City of Holiness, or the Holy City, and so also in several places in the New Testament." And this same title they gave it in their coins; for the inscription of their shekels (many of which are still extant) was Jerusalem Kedushah,'' i. e. Jerusalem the Holy; and this coin going current among the neighbouring nations, especially after the Babylonish captivity had made a dispersion of that people over all the east, it carried this name with it among them; and they from thence called thic city by both names, Jerusalem Kedushah, and at length, for shortness-sake, Ke- dushah only, and the Syrians (who in their dialect usually turned the Hebrew sh into th) Kedutha. And the Syriac, in the time of Herodotus, being the oni-y 1 2 Kings xxiii. 31. 2 Cliroii. xxxvi. 1. 2 Josephus Antiq. lib. iO. c. 6. 3 2 KinR.M xxiii. 33. 2 Chron. xxxvi. 3, 4. A This Jehoiakim was elder brother to Jehoahaz; for the latter was but twenty-three years oJd when the other was twenlyfive, 2 Kings xxiii. 31. 3G. and yet the jieopleon the death of Josiah, chose Jehoahaz to suc- ceed him. 5 The whole annual tribute, as here taxed, came to 52,200/. of our money. 6 Herodotus, lib. 2. 7 2 Chron. nxvi. 3. 8 Golii Notffi ad Alfraganum, p. 137. Sandy's Travels, b. 3. p. J55. Baudrandi Geographia sub voce Hie- losolyma. ^ ^ ^A*''".*.'^,^^- Isn- Jtlviii- 2 1=1 I. Dan. U. 24. 10 Matt. iv. 5. xsvii. 53. Rev. xxi. 2. " r ^'S""""* ■ Works, vol. .. •). 497. vol. 2. p. 303, and Walton's Apparatus before tlie Polyglot Bible THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ^7 language that was then spoken in Palestine (the Hebrew having been no more used there, or any where else, as a vulgar language, after the Babylonish cap- tivity,) he found it, when he travelled through that country, to be called there in the Syriac dialect Kedutha; from whence, by giving it a Greek termination, he made it, in the Greek language, k^j^.,, or Cadytis, in his history, which he wrote about the time that Nehemiah ended his twelve years' government at Jerusalem. And for the same reason that it was called Kedushah, or Kedutha, in Syria and Palestine, the Arabs in their language called it Bait Almokdes,' i. e. the Holy Buildings, or the Holy City, and often with another adjective of the same root, and the same signification. Bait Alkuds, and at length simply Alkuds, i. e. the Holy, by which name only it is now called by the Turks, ^ Arabs, and all other nations of the Mahometan religion in those parts. And that it may not look strange to prove an ancient name by the modern name which is now given that that place, it is necessary I acquaint the reader, that the Arabs being the an- cientest nation in the world (who have never been by any conquest dispossessed, or driven out of their country, but have there always remained in a continued descent from the first planters of it even to this day,) and being also as little given to make changes in their manners and usages, as they are as to their coun- try, they have still retained those same names of places which were at first given them, and on their getting the empire of the east, restored them again to many of them, after they had been for several ages extinct, by the intermediate changes thathad happened in them. And thus the ancient metropolis of Egypt,^ which from Mezraim, the son of Ham, the first planter of that country after the flood, was called Mesri, and afterward for many ages had the name of Memphis, mms, on the Arabs making themselves masters of Egypt again, called Mesri, and hath retained that name ever since, though, by the building of Cairo on the other side of the Nile over against it (for Mesri stands on the west side of that river,) that ancient and once noble, city is now brought in a manner to desolation. And for the same reason the city of Tyrus, which was anciently called Zor, or Zur,^ (from whence the whole country of Syria had its name,) hath, since it fell into the hands of the Arabs, on the erecting of their empire in the east, been again called Sor,* and is at this day known by no other name in those parts. And by the same means the city of Palmyra hath again recovered the old name of Tad- mor, by which it was in the time of Solomon,'' and is now known in the east by no other name: and abundance of other like instances might be given in the east to this purpose, and the like may be found neai'er home. For it is well known that the Welsh, in their language, do still call all the cities in England by the old British names by which they were called one thousand three hundred years ago, before the Saxons dispossessed them of this country; and should they re- cover it again, and here get the dominion over it as formerly, no doubt they would again restore to all places here the same British names by which they stiU call them. jJn. 609. Jehoink. 1.] — Jehoiakim, on his taking on him the kingdom, followed the example of his brother in doing that which was evil;^ for he wont on in his steps to relax all the good order and discipline of his father, as the other had done, and the people (who never went heartily into that good king's reforma- tion,) gladly laying hold thereof, did let themselves loose to the full bent of their own depraved inclinations, and run into all manner of iniquity; whereon the prophet Jeremiah, being sent of God, first went into the king's house,'* and there proclaimed God's judgments against him and his family if he went on in his iniquities, and did not amend and repent of them; and after that he Avent up 1 Golii Notffi ad Alfrasanuin, p. ]S7. 2 Sandy's Travels, b. 3. p. l.W. Baiidrandi Geog. sub voce Hiernsolyina. 3 Bocharti Phalefr. part I. lib. 4. c. 24. Golii IVota; ad Alfraganum, p. 1.52, i5.1, &c. . . 4 So it is called in the original Hebrew text of the Old Testament, wherever there is mention of this city therein. 5 Golii Vota5 ad Alfraganuin, p. 130, 131. Baudrandi Geog. sub voce Tyrus. Thevenot's Travels, part 1. b. 9. c. (iO. p. 220. 6 1 Kings Ix. 18. 2 Ohron. viii. 4. 7 2 Kings .xxiii. 37. 2 Chron. xxxvi. 5. 8 Jer. xxu. Vol. I.— 13 96 CONNEXIOJN OF THE HlSTORTf OJ< into the temple,' and there spoke to all the people that came up thither to worship after the same manner, declaring unto them, that if they Avould turn from their evil ways, God would turn from his wrath, and repent of the evil which he purposed to bring upon them; but that, if they would not hearken unto him to walk in the law of God, and keep his commandments, then the wrath of God should be poured out upon them, and both that city and the temple should be brought to utter desolution: which angering the priests that then attended in the temple, they laid hold of him, and brought him before the king's council to have him put to death. But Ahikam, one of the chief lords of the council, so befriended Jeremiah, that he brought him off, and got him discharged by the general suffrage, not only of the princes, but also of aU the elders of the people that w^ere then present. This Ahikam was the father of Gedaliah,^ that was afterward made governor of the land under the Chaldeans, and the son of Sha- phan the scribe (who was chief minister of state under king Josiah,^) and brother to Gemariah,'' Elasah,^ and Janzaniah,® who were great men in those days, and members also of the council with him; and therefore, in conjunction with them, he had a great interest there, which he made use of on this ocasion to deliver the prophet from that mischief which was intended against him. But Uriah,^ another prophet of the Lord, who had this same year prophesied after the same manner, could not so come off". For Jehoiakim was so incensed against him for it, that he sought to put him to death; whereon Uriah fled into Egypt. But this did not secure him from his revenge; for he sent into Egypt after him, and, having procured him to be there seized, brought him up from thence and slew him at Jerusalem; which became a farther enhancing of his iniquity, and also of God's wrath against him for it. About the same time also prophesied the prophets Habakkukand Zephaniah, who being called to the prophetic office in the reign of Josiah; continued (as seems most likely) to this time; for they prophesied the same things that Jeremiah did, and upon the same occasion,® that is, destruction and desolation upon Judah and Jerusalem, because of the many heinous sins they were then guilty of. Zepha- niah doth not name the Chaldeans, who were to be the executioners of this wrath of God upon them, but Habakkuk doth.® As to Habakkuk, neither the time in which he lived, nor the parents from whom he was descended, are any where named in scripture; but he prophesying the coming of the Chaldeans in the same manner as Jeremiah did, this gives reason to conjecture that he lived in the same time. Of Zephaniah it is directly said, that he prophesied in the time of Josiah;"^ and in his pedigree (which is also given us) his father's grandfather is called Hezekiah, which some taking to be king Hezekiah do therefore reckon this prophet to have been of royal descent. An. 607. Jehaiak. 3.] — In the third year of Jehoiakiit, NabopoUasar, king of Babylon," finding; that on Necho's taking of Carchemish, aU Syria and Palestine had revolted to liim, and that he being old and infirm was unable to march thither himself to reduce them, he took Nebuchadnezzar his son into partnership with him in the empire, and sent him with an army into those parts;'" and from hence the Jewish computation of the years of Nebuchadnezzar's reign begins, that is, from the end of the third year of Jehoiakim: for it was about the end of that year that this was done; and therefore, according to the Jews, the fourth year of Jehoiakim was the first year of Nebuchadnezzar;" but, according to the Babylonians, his reign is not reckoned to begin till after his father's death, which happened two years afterward; and both computations being found in scripture, it is necessary to say so much here for the reconciling of them. An. 606. Jehoiak. 4.] — In the fourth year of Jehoiakim, Nebuchadnezzai I Jer. xxvi. 2 2 Kings xxv. 22. 3 2 Kings xxii. 4 Jer. xxxvi. 10. 5 Jer. xxix. 3. 6 Ezek. viii. 11. From which place it is inferred, that Jaazaniah was then president of the Sanhedrim. 7 Jer. ixvi. 20—23. 8 Hab. i. 1—11. Zeph. i. 1—18. 9 Hab. i. 5. 10 Zeph. i. 1. II Berosus apud Joseph. ,Antiq. lib. 10. c. 11. et contra Apion. lib. 1. 12 Daniel i. 1. 13 Jer. xxv. 1. Vl'hich same fourth year was the twenty-third from the thirteenth of Josiah, when lere- miab first began to prophecy, ver. 3 THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 99 having beaten the army of Necho/ king of Egypt, at the Euphrates, ami rnlakfu Carchemish, marched toward Syria and Palestine, to recover those provinces again to the Babylonish empire; on whose approach the Rechabites," who, ac- cording to the institution of Jonadab the son of Rechab their father, had always abstained from wine, and hitherto only lived in tents, finding on security from this invasion in the open country, retired for their safety to Jerusalem, where was transacted between them and Jeremiah what we find related in the thirty- fifth chapter of his prophecies. This very same year Jeremiah prophesied of the coming of Nebuchadnezzar against Judah and Jerusalem,' that the whole land should be delivered into his hands, and that a captivity of seventy years' continuance should after that ensue upon the people of the Jews; and he also delivered several other prophesies of the many calamities and woful desolations that were then ready to be brought upon them, intending thereby, if possible, to bring them to repentance, that so the wrath of God might be diverted from them. But all this working nothing upon their hardened and obdurate hearts, God commanded him to collect together, and write in a roll,* all the words of pro- phecy which had been spoken by him against Israel, Judith, and the nations, from the thirteenth year of Josiah (when he was first called to the prophetic office) to that time; whereon Jeremiah called to him Baruch, the son of Neriah, a chief disciple of his, who, being a ready scribe, WTote from his mouth all as God had commanded, and then went with the roU, which he had thus written, up into the temple, and there read it, in the hearing of aU the people, on the great fast of the expiation, when aU Judah and Jerusalem were assembled to- gether at that solemnity; for Jeremiah, being then shut up in prison for his former prophesying, could not go up thither himself, and therefore, by God's command, Baruch w^as sent to do it in his stead; and at his first reading of the roll, whether it were that Jehoiakim and his princes were then absent to take care of the borders of the kingdom, which Nebuchadnezzar was then just ready to invade, or that amidst the distractions which usually happen on such impend- ing dangers, men's minds were otherwise engaged, no resentments were at that time expressed either against the prophet or his disciple on this occasion. But Baruch being very much affrighted jand dismayed at the threats of the roll, which he had thus wrote and publicly read, the word of prophecy, w'hich we have in the forty-fifth chapter of Jeremiah, was sent from God on purpose to comfort him, and a promise is therein given him, that amidst all the calamities, destructions, and desolations, which, according to the words of the roU, should be certainly brought upon Judah and Jerusalem, he should be sure to find a deliverance; for that none of them should reach him, but God would give him his life for a prey, in all places wheresoever he should go. The great fast of the ex-piation, wherein Baruch read the roll, as is above re- lated, was annually kept by the Jews on the 10th day of the month Tizri,* which answers to our September. Immediately after that, Nebuchadnezzar invaded Judea; and, having laid siege to Jerusalem, made himself master of it in the ninth month, called Cisleu,'' which answers to our November, on the 18th day of that month (for on that day is still kept by the Jews an annual fast in commemoration of it even to this day;) and having then taken Jehoiakim prisoner, he put him in chains, to carry him to Babylon. But he having hum- bled himself to Nebuchadnezzar,' and submitted to become his tributar}^ and thereon sworn fealty to him, he was again restored to his kingdom; and Nebu- chadnezzar marched from Jerusalem for the farther prosecuting of his victories against the Egyptians. But, before he removed from Jerusalem, he had caused great numbers of the people to be sent captive to Babylon, and particularly gave order to Ashpenaz, the master of his eunuchs,* that he should make choice out of tlie children of 1 Jer. xlvi. I. 2 Jcr. xxxv. 6 — U. 3 Jcr. xsv. i Jer. xzzvi. 5 Lev. xvi. 29. xxiii. 27. (i Dan. i. 2. 2 Chron. ixivi. 6. 7 2 Kings xiiv. 1. 8 Dan. i. 3. JOO CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the royal family, and of the nobility of the land, of such as he found to be o£ the fairest countenance, and the quickest parts, to be carried to Babylon, and there made eunuchs in his palace; whereby was fulfilled the word of the Lord spoken by Isaiah fhe prophet to Hezekiah,' king of Judah, above a hundred years before. At the same time, also, he carried away a great part of the ves- sels of the house of the Lord to put them in the house of Bel,^ his god, at Babylon. And therefore, the people being thus carried into captivity, the sons of the royal family and the nobihty of the land made eunuchs and slaves in the palace of the king of Babylon, the vessels of the temple carried thither, and the king made a tributary, and the whole land now brought into vassalage under the Babylonians, from hence must be reckoned the beginning of the se- venty years of the Babylonish captivity, foretold by the prophet Jeremiah:^ and the fourth year of Jehoiakim must be the first year in that computation. Among the number of the children that were carried away in this captivity by the master of the eunuchs, were Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah." Daniel they called Belteshazzar, and the other three, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. Some, indeed, do place their captivity some years later, but that is absolutely inconsistent with what is elsewhere said in scripture. For these children, after their carrying away to Babylon, were to be three years under the tuition of the master of the eunuchs,^ to be instructed by him in the lan- guage and the learning of the Chaldeans, before they were to be admitted to the presence of the king, to stand and serve before him. But in the second year of Nebuchadnezzar's reign at Babylon,® from his father's death (which was but the fourth year after his first taking of Jerusalem,) Daniel had not only admission and freedom of access to the presence of the king, but we find liim there interpreting of his dream,'' and immediately thereon advanced to be chief of the governors of the wise men,® and ruler over aU the province of Babylon: for which trust less than four years' instruction in the language, laws, usages, and learning of the country can scarce be thought sufiicient to qualify him, nor could he any sooner be old enough for it, for he was but a youth when he w^as first carried away from Jerusalem. And therefore all this put togethei doth necessarily determine the time of Daniel's and the other children's carry ing away to Babylon to the year where I have placed it; and, if we wiU make scripture consistent with scripture, it could not possibly have been any later Daniel, speaking of the captivity,^ begins the history of it from the third yeai of Jehoiakim, which placeth it back still a year farther than I have done: and this is an objection on the other hand; but the answer hereto is easy. Daniel begins his computation from the time that Nebuchadnezzar was sent from Ba bylon by his father on this expedition, Avhich was in the latter end of the third year of Jehoiakim: after that two months at least must have been spent in his march to the borders of Syria. There, in the fourth year of Jehoiakim (we suppose in the beginning of that year,) he fought the Egyptians; and having overthrown them in battle, besieged Carchemish, and took it; after this, he re- duced all the provinces and cities of Syria and Phoenicia, in which having em- ployed the greatest part of the year (and a great deal of work it was to do with- in that time,) in the beginning of October he came and laid siege to Jerusalem, and about a month after took the city: and from hence we date the beginning of Daniel's servitude, and also the beginning of the seventy years of the Baby- lonish captivity; and therefore do reckon that year to have been the first of both. The Scythians, who had now for twenty-eight years held all the Upper Asia (that is, the two Armenians, Cappadocia, Pontus, Colchis, and Iberia,) were this year again driven out of it."' The Medes, whom they had dispossessed of these provinces, had long endeavoured to recover them by open force; but finding themselves unable to succeed this way, they at length accomphshed it by treachery; for, under the covert of a peace (which they had made on purpose to 1 Isa. xxxis. 7. 2 Kings xx. 19. 2 Dan. j. 2. 3 Jer. xxv. 11. xxix. 10. 4 Dan. i. 6. 5 Ibid. i. 5. 6 Dan. ii. IC. 7 Ibid. ii. 31. 8 Uan. ii. 48. 9 Ibid. i. 1. 10 Hentdot. Mb. 1 THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 10 carry on the fraud,) they invited the greatest part of them to the feast, where having made them drunk, they slew them all: after which, having easily sub- dued the rest, they recovered from them all that they had lost, and again ex- tended their empire to the River Halys, which had been the ancient borders of it toward the west. An. 605. Jchoiak. 5.] — After the Chaldeans were gone from Jerusalem, Jeho- iakim, instead of being amended by those heavy chastisements which by their hand God had inflicted on him and his kingdom, rather grew worse under them in all those ways of wickedness and impiety which he had before practised; and Judah and Jerusalem kept peace with him herein, to the farther provoking of God's wrath, and the hastening of their own destruction. However, no means were omitted to reclaim them; and Jeremiah the prophet, who was particularly sent to them for this purpose, was constantly calling upon them, and exhorting them to turn unto the Lord their God, that so his wrath might be turned from them, and they saved from the destruction which was coming upon them, of which he ceased not continually to warn them. And they having, on the ninth month, called Cisleu, proclaimed a public fast to be held on the 18th day of the same, because of the calamity which they had suffered thereon, in the taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans the year foregoing (which hath ever since been annually observed by them in commemoration hereof, as hath been before said,) the prophet laying hold of this opportunity, when all Judah and Jerusalem Ave re met together to keep this solemnity,' sent Baruch again up into the temple with the roll of his prophecies, there to read it the second time in the hearing of all of them, making thereby another trial, if by the terrors of these prophecies it were possible to fright them into their duty. And it being God's command by the mouth of his prophet, Baruch accordingly went up into the temple on the said fast-day, and entering into the chamber of Gemariah the scribe (which was the room where the king's council used to sit in the temple, near the east gate of the same,) did there, from a window aloft, read, in the hearing of all the people then gathered together in the court below, all the words of the said roU: which Michaiah the son of Gemariah, who was then present, hearing, went immediately to the king's house, and there informed the lords of the council of it; whereon they sent for Baruch, and caused him to sit down and read the roll over to them: at the hearing whereof, and the threats therein contained, they being much affrighted, inquired of Baruch the manner of his writing of it; and being informed that it was all dictated to him from the mouth of the prophet, they ordered him to leave the roll and depart, advising, that he and Jeremiah should immediately go and hide themselves where no one might find them; and then wont in to the king, and informed him of all that had passed; whereon he sent for the roll, and caused it to be read to him; but after he had heard three or four leaves of it, as he was sitting by the fire in the winter parlour, he took it and cut it with a penknife, and cast it into the fire that was there before him, till it was all consumed, notwithstanding some of the lords of the council entreated him to the contrary; and immediately thereon issued out an order to have Baruch and Jeremiah seized; but having hid them- selves, as advised by the council, they could not be found. The Jews keep an annual fast even to this day for the burning of this roU; the day marked for it in their calendar is the 29th day of Cisleu," eleven days after that which they keep for that fast, on which it was read in the temple. But the reading of the roll on the fast of the ISth of Cisleu, and the burning of it according to the account given hereof by Jeremiah, seem immediately to have followed each other. After the burning of this roll, another by God's especial command was forth- with written in the same manner from the mouth of the prophet, by the hand 1 Jer. xxxvi. 9, 10, &c. 2 Cisleu is the ninth month in the Jewish year, and answers to our November. l(fci CONNEXION OF THE fflSTORY OF of Baruch, wherein was contained all that was in the former roll; and there were added many other like words, and particularly that prophecy in respect of Je- hoiakim and his house, which is, for this impious fact, in the thirtieth and thirty- first verses of the thirty-sixth chapter of Jeremiah, denounced against them. In making the roll to be read twice in the temple by Baruch, I confess I differ from most that have commented upon this place of scripture. But as the reading of the roU by Baruch is, in the thirty-sixth chapter of Jeremiah, twice related, so it is plain to me that it was twice done: for in the first relation,' it is said to be done in the fourth year of Jehoiakim, and in the second,^ it is said to be done in the fifth; which plainly denotes two different times. And in the first relation, Jeremiah is said to be shut up in prison^ when the roll was read; but in the second relation it plainly appears he was out of prison, for he was then at fuU liberty to go out of the way and hide himself^ For these reasons I take it for certain that the roll was twice read: and I have archbishop Usher with me in the same opinion, whose judgment must always be of the greatest weight m such matters. Nebuchadnezzar, after his departure from Jerusalem, employed all this year in carrying on his war against the Egj"ptians, in which he had that success, that before the ensuing winter he had driven them out of all Syria and Pales- tine, and brought in subjection to him,^ from the River Euphrates to the river of Egypt, all that formerly belonged to the king of Egypt, i. e. all Syria and Palestine. For, as the River Euphrates was the boundary of Syria toward the north-east; so the river of Egypt was the boundaiy of Palestine toward the south- west. This river of Egypt, which is so often mentioned in scripture as the boundary of the land of Canaan, or Palestine, toAvard Egypt, was not the Nile, as many suppose, but a small river, which, running through the desert that hes between these two countries was anciently reckoned the common boundary of both. And thus far the land reached, which was promised to the seed of Abra- ham (Gen. XV. 18,) and was afterward by lot divided among them, Joshua xv. 4. jln. 604. Jehoiak. 6.] — Toward the end of the fifth year of Jehoiakim, died NabopoUasar, king of Babylon, and father of Nebuchadnezzar, after he had reigned one-and-twenty years,'^ which Nebuchadnezzar being informed of,' he immediately, with a few only of his followers, hastened through the desert the nearest way to Babylon, leaving the gross of his army, with the prisoners and prey, to be brought after him by his generals. On his arrival at the palace, he received the government from the hands of those who had carefully reserved it for him, and thereon succeeded his father in the Avhole empire, which contained Chaldea, Assyria, Arabia, Syria, and Palestine, and reigned over it, according to Ptolemy, forty-three years; the first of which begins from the January follow- ing, which is the Babylonish account, from which the Jewish account differs two years, as reckoning his reign from the time he was admitted to be partner with his father. From hence we have a double computation of the years of his reign, the Jewish and the Babylonish; Daniel follows the latter, but all other parts of scripture that make mention of him the other. An. 603. Jehoiak. 7.] — In the seventh year of Jehoiakim, which was the second year of Nebuchadnezzar, according to the Babylonish account, and the fourth according to the Jewish, Daniel revealed unto Nebuchadnezzar his dream,* and also unfolded to him the intei-pretation of it, in the manner as we have it at large related in the second chapter of Daniel; whereon he was advanced to great honour, being made chief of the governors over aU the wise men of Babylon, and also chief ruler over the whole province of Babylon, and one of the chief lords of the council, who always continued in the king's court, he being then about the age of twenty -two. And in his prosperity he was not forgetful of his three companions, who had been brought to Babylon with him, Shadrach, Me- shach, and Abednego; but having spoken to the king in their behalf, procured 1 Jer. xxxvi. 1. ' 2 Ibid, xxxvi. 9. 3. Ibid, xxxvi. 5. 4 Ibid, xxxvi. 26. 5 2 Kings xxir. 7 6 Canon Ptolemxi. 7 Berosus apud Joseph. Antiq. lib. 10. c. 11. et contra Apionem, lib. 1. 8 Dan.ii THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 103 (hat they were preferred to places of great honour under him in the provii ice of Babylon. These afterward made themselves very signally known to the king, and also to the whole empire of Babylon, by their constancy to their religion, in refusing to worship the golden image which Nebuchadnezzar had set up, and by the wonderful deliverance which God wrought fof them thereon; which de- servedly recommending them to the king's highest regard, they were therfeon much higher advanced; the whole history whereof is at full related in the third chapter of Daniel. An. 599. Jehoiak. 11.] — The same year Jehoialcim, after he had served the king of Babylon three years,' rebelled against him, and refusing to pay him any more tribute, renewed his confederacy with Pharaoh-Necho, king of Egypt, in opposition to him. Whereon Nebuchadnezzar, not being then at leisure, by rea- son of other engagements, to come himself and chastise him, sent orders to all his lieutenants and governors of provinces in those parts to make war upon him; which brought upon Jehoiakim inroads and invasions from every quarter," the Ammonites, the Moabites, the Syrians, the Arabians, and all the other nations round him, who had subjected themselves to the Babylonish yoke, infesting him with incursions, and harassing him with depredations on every side: and thus diey continued to do for three years together, tiU at length, in the eleventh year of his reign, all parties joining together against hlm,^ they shut him up in Jeru- salem, where, in the prosecution of the siege, having taken him prisoner in some sally (it may be supposed) which he made upon them, they slew him with the sword, and then cast out his dead body into the highway, without one of the gates of Jerusalem, allowing it no other burial,'' as the proi)het Jeremiah had foretold, than that of an ass, that is, to be cast forth into a place of the greatest contempt, there to rot and be consumed to dust in the open air. The year before died his confederate,'^ on whom he chiefly depended, Pha- raoh-Necho, king of Egypt, after he had reigned sixteen year^, and Psammis his son succeeded him in the kingdom. Jin. 598. Jehoiachin. Zedekiah 1.] — Jehoiakim being dead," Jehoiachin his son (who is also called Jeconiah and Coniah) reigned in his stead, who doing evil in the sight of the Lord, in the same manner as his father had done, this pro- voked a very bitter declaration of God's wrath against him,'' by the mouth of the prophet Jeremiah, and it was as bitterly executed upon him. For after Jehoiakim's death, the servants of Nebuchadnezzar (that is, tiis lieutenants and governors of the provinces, that were under his subjection in those parts) still continued to block up Jerusalem;^ and, after three months, Nebuchadnezzar himself came thither in person with his royal army, and caused the place to be begirt with a close siege on every side; whereon Jehoiachin, finding himself unable to defend it, went out to Nebuchadnezzar with his mother, and his princes and servants, and delivered himself into his hands. But hereby he ob- tained no other favour than to save his life; for being immediately put in chains he was carried to Babylon, and there continued 'shut up in prison till the death of Nebuchadnezzar, which was full seven-and-thirty years. Nebuchadnezzar, having hereon made himself master of Jerusalem, took tlience all the treasures of the house of the Lord," and the treasures of the king's house, and cut in pieces the vessels of gold, which Solomon king of Is- rael had made in the temple of the Lord, and carried them to ]>abylon; and he also carried thither with him a vast number of captives, Jehoiachin the king, his mother, and his wives, and his officers, and princes, and all the might)^ men of valour, even to the number of ten thousand men out of Jerusalem only, be- sides the smiths, and the carpenters, and other artificers; and out of the rest of the land, of the mighty men seven thousand, and of the craftsmen and smiths one thousand, besides three thousand twenty and three,'" which had been car- J. 2 Kings xxiv. 1. 2 Ibid. .rxiv. 2. 3 Ibid, x.xiv. 10. 4 Jnr. xxxii. Ja i!'. xxx"< 30 5 Horodot. lib. 2. (i 2 Kiiics .\xiv.O. 2CUron. xxxvi. 9. 7 Jer. x.xii. 24— 30. 8 2 King-- xiiv la »'. 9 2 Kings xxiv. 13—10. 10 Jer. lii. 28. 104 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF ned away the year before out of the open country, before the siege of Jerusalem was begun. With the mighty men of valour he recruited his army, and the ar- tificers he employed in the carrying on of his building at Babylon, of whict we shaU speak hereafter. In this captivity Avas carried away to Babylon Ezekiel the prophet,' the sob of Buzi, of the house of Aaron, and therefore the era whereby he recicon* throughout all his prophecies is from this captivity. After this great carrying away of the Jews into captivity,^ the poorer sort ot the people being still left in the land, Nebuchadnezzar made Mattaniah, the son of Josiah and uncle of Jehoiachin, king over them, taking of him a solemn oath to be true and faithful unto him; and, to engage him the more to be so, he changed his name from Mattaniah to Zedekiah, which signifieth the justice of the Lord, intending by this name to put him continually in mind of the ven- geance which he was to expect from the justice of the Lord his God, if he vio- lated that fidelity which he had in his name sworn unto him. Zedekiah, being thus made king, reigned eleven years in Jerusalem; but his ways being evil in the sight of the Lord, as were those of his nephew and bro- thers that reigned before him, he did thereby so far fill up the measure of the iniquities of his forefathers, that they at length drew down upon Judah and Jerusalem that terrible destruction in which his reign ended. And thus was concluded the second war which Nebuchadnezzar had with the Jews. Three years he managed it by his lieutenants and governors of the neighbouring provinces of his empire. In the fourth year he came himself in person, and put an end to it in the captivity of Jehoiachin, and the taking of Jerusalem. What hindered him from coming sooner is not said; only it appears, that in the tenth year of Jehoiakim, he was engaged in an arbitra- tion between the Medes and Lydians. The occasion was this. After the Medes had recovered all the Upper Asia out of the hand of the Scythians,' and again extended their borders to the River Halys, which was the com mon boundary between them and the Lydians, it was not long before there happened a war between these two nations, which was managed for five years together with various success. In the sixth year they engaged each other with the utmost of their strength, intending to make that battle deci- sive of the quarrel that was between them. But, in the midst of it, while the fortune of the, day seemed to hang in an equal balance between them, there happened an eclipse, which overspread both armies with darkness; whereon, being frightened with what had happened, they both desisted from fighting any longer, and agreed to refer the controversy to the arbitration of two neighbouring princes. The Lydians chose Syennesis, king of '^■ili- cia, and the Medes Nebuchadnezzar,'* king of Babylon, who agreed a peace netween them, on the terms, that Astyages, son to Cyaxares, king of Me- dia, should take to wife Ariena, the daughter of Halyattis, king of the Ly- dians; of which marriage, within a year after, was born Cyaxares, who is called Darius the Median in the book- of Daniel. This eclipse was foretold Dy Thales the Milesian; and it happened on the 20th of September, accord- ing to the Julian account, in the hundred and forty-seventh year of Nabo- nassar. and in the ninth of the reign of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, which was the year before Christ 601. The same year that Cyaxares was born to Astyages, he gave his daughter Mandana, whom he had by a former wife, in marriage to Cambyses, king of Per- sia; of whom the next year after (which was the last year of Jehoiakim) was born Cyrus, the famous founder of the Persian monarchy, and the restorer of the Tews to their country, their temple, and their former state. Jehoiachin being thus carried into captivity, and Zedekiah settled in the throne, Jeremiah had, in a vision,* under the type of two baskets of figs, lore 1 Ezek. xl. 1. 2 2 Kings xxiv. 17. 2Chron. xxxvi. 10. 3 Herodotus, lib. 2. 4 He is by Herodotus, lib. 1. called Labvnctus. 5 Jer. xxiv. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 105 shown unto him the restoration which God would again give to them who were carried into captivity, and the misery and desolation which should befall them, with their king, that were still in the land; that the captivity of the former should become a means of preservation unto them, while the liberty which the others were left in should serve only to lead them to their utter ruin; as accordingly it befell them in the destruction of Jerusalem, and the utter devastation of the land, which happened a few years afterward. The same year God also foreshowed to Jeremiah the confusion which he would Dring upon Elam' (a kingdom lying upon the River Ulai, eastward beyond the Tigris,) and the restoration which he would afterward give thereto; which accord- ingly came to pass; for it was conquered by Nebuchadnezzar," and subjected to him, in the same manner as Judah was. But aftenn^ard, joining with Cyrus, it helped to conquer and subdue the Babylonians, who had before conquered them; itid Shushan, which was the chief city of that province,^ was thenceforth made he metropolis of the Persian empire, and had the throne of the kingdom placed in it. After the departure of Nebuchadnezzar out of Judea and Syria, Zedekiah havmo; settled himself in the kingdom,'* the king-s of the Ammonites, and of the Moabites, and of the Edomites, and of the Zidonians, and the Tyrians, and of the other neighbouring nations, sent their ambassadors to Jerusalem, to congratu- late Zedekiah on his accession to the throne, and then proposed to him a league against the king of Babylon, for the shaking off his yoke, and the hindering him from any more returning into those parts. Whereon Jeremiah, by the command of God, made him yokes and bonds, and sent them by the said ambassadors to their respective masters, with this message from God, That God had given all heir countries unto the king of Babylon, and that they should serve him, and i'is son, and son's son, and that, if they would submit to his yoke, and become obedient to him, it should be well with them and their land, but if otherwise Ihey should be consumed and destroyed before him. And he spake also to king Zedekiah according to the same words; which had that influence on him, that he did not then enter into the league that was proposed to him by the ambassadors of those princes. But, afterward, when it was farther strengthened, by the joinmg I>f the Egyptians and other nations in it, and he and his people began to be tired {^^ith the heavy burden and oppression of the Babylonish domination over them, Jlc also was drawn into this confederacy; which ended in the absolute ruin both of him and his kingdom, as will be hereafter related. ^in. 597. Zedek.'] — Zedekiah, about the second year of his reign,^ sent Elasah the son of Shaphan, and Gemariah the son of Hilkiah, to Babylon, on an em- bassy to king Nebuchadnezzar. By them Jeremiah wrote a letter to the Jews of the captivity in Babylon. The occasion of which was, Ahab the son of Ki- laiah, and Zedekiah the son of Maaseiah, two of the captivity among the Jews at Babylon, taking upon them to be prophets sent to them from God, fed them ivith lying prophecies and false promises of a speedy restoration, whereon they neglected to make any settlements in the places assigned them for their habita- tion, either by building of houses, cultivating their land, marrying of wives, or doing any thing else for their own interest and welfare in the countiy M'here -hey were carried, out of a vain expectation of a speedy return. To remedy this evil, Jeremiah wrote to them to let them know, that they were deceived by those who made them entertain such false hopes: that, by the appointment of God, their captivity at Babylon was to last seventy years; and those who remained in Judah and Jerusalem should be so far from being able to efiect any restoration for them, that God would speedily send against them the sword, the famine, and the pestilence, for the consuming of the greatest part of them, and scatter the rest over the face of the earth, to be a curse, and an astonishment, and an hiss- ing, and a reproach, among the nations whither he would drive them. And therefore, he exhorts tnem to provide for themselves in the country Avhither they 1 Jer. xiix. 34— 31). 2 Xen.Cyropsd. lib. 6. 3 Strabo, lib. 15. p. 727. 4 Jcr. sxvii. 5 Jer. xxix Vol. L— 14 106 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF are carried, as settled inhabitants of the same, and comport themse.ves there, according to all the duties which belong to them as such, without expecting any return till the time that God had appointed. And as to their false prophets, who had prophecied a lie unto them, he denounced God's curse against them in a speedy and fearful destruction; which accordingly was soon executed upon them: for Nebuchadnezzar finding that they disturbed the people by their vain prophe- cies, and hindered them from making settlements for themselves in the places where he had planted them, caused them to be seized and roasted to death in the fire. The latter Jews say, that these two men were the two ciders who Avould have corrupted Susanna,' and that Nebuchadnezzar commanded them to be burned for this reason. The whole foundation of this conceit is, that Jeremiah, in the twenty-third verse of the chapter, where he writes hereof, accuseth them for committing adultery with their neighbours' wives, from whence they conjecture all the rest. These letters being read to the people of the captivity at Babylon, such as were loath to be dispossessed of their vain hopes, were much offended at them; and, therefore, Semaiah, the Nehelamite, another false pretender to prophecy amongf them, Avritins their as well as his own sentiments hereof, sent back letters by the same ambassadors, directing them to Zephaniah, the son of Maaseiah, the second priest, and to all the priests and people at Jerusalem; wherein he complained of Jeremiah for writing the said letters, and required them to rebuke him for the same; which letters being read to Jeremiah, the word of God came unto him, which denounced a very severe punishment upon Semaiah for the same. An. 595. Zedek. 4.] — In the fourth year of Zedekiah, and the fifth month of that year, Hananiah, the son of Azur of Gibeon,^ took upon him to prophecy falsely in the name of the Lord, that within two full years God would bring back all the vessels of the house of the Lord; and king Jechoniah, and all the cap- tives again to Jerusalem; whereon the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah con- cerning Hananiah, that seeing he had spoken to the people of Judah in the name of thi Lord, who sent him not, and had made them thereby to trust in a lie, he should be smitten of God, and die before the year should expire; and, accordingly, he died the same year, in the seventh month, which was within two months after. The same year Jeremiah had revealed unto him the prophecies, which we have in the fiftieth and fifty-first chapters of Jeremiah, concerning God's judg- ments, which were to be executed upon Chaldea and Babylon, by the Medes and Persians. All which Jeremiah wrote in a book, and delivered it to Seraiah,^ the son of Neriah, and brother of Baruch, who was then sent to Babylon by Zedekiah, commanding him that when he should come to Babylon, he should there read the same upon the banks of Euphrates; and that when he should have there made an end of reading it, he should bind a stone to it, and cast it into the midst of the river, to denote thereby, that, as that should sink, so should Babylon also sink, and never rise any more; which hath since been fully veri- fied, about two thousand years having now passed since Babylon hath been wholly desolated, and without an inhabitant. Baruch seemeth to have gone with his brother in this journey to Babylon; for he is said, in the apocryphal book that bears his name,"* to have read that book at Babylon, in the hearing of king Je- choniah, or Jehoiachin, and of the elders and people of the Jews tlien at Baby- lon, on the fifth year after the taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans; which can be understood of no other taking of it, than that wherein Jehoiachin was made a captive; for, after the last taking of it, in the eleventh of Zedekiah, Baruch could not be in Babylon; for after that he went into Egypt with Jeremiah, from whence it is not likely that he did ever return. And farther, it is said, in this very book of Baruch, that after the reading of his book, as aforesaid, a collection was made at Babylon of money, which was sent to Jerusalem to Joakim, the 1 Vide Gemaram in Sanheilrin. 2 Jer. xxviii. 3 lb. li, 59—64. 4 Baruch i. 1—4. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 107 high-priest, the son of Hilkiah, the son of Shallum, and to the priests, and to all the people that were found with him at Jerusalem, to buy burnt-ofFenngs, and sin-ofFerings, and incense, and to prepare the mincha, and to offer upon the altai of the Lord their God; nothing of which could be true after the last taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans: for then the city and temple were burnt and utterly destroyed; and after that there was no high-priest, altar, altar-service, or people to be found at Jerusalem, till the return ol" the Jews again thither, after the end of their seventy years' captivity. And if there were any such person as Joakim (for he is no where else named,) since he is here said to be the son of Hiikiah, the son of Shallum, he must have been the uncle of Seraiah, who was high- priest at the burning of the temple, and grandson to the same Hilkiah; and therefore he must have been high-priest before Seraiah, if there M'ere any such person in that office at all: for it is certain, there were none such in it after him, during the life of Jechoniah. But of what authority this book is, or by whom it was written, whether any thing related therein be historicaJIy true, or the whole of it a fiction, is altogether uncertain. Grotius' thinks it wholly feigned by some Hellenistical Jews, under Baruch's name, and so do many others; and it cannot be denied, but that they have strong reasons on their side. The sub- ject of the book is an epistle sent, or feigned to be sent, by king Jehoiachin, and t/jf- Jews in captivity with him at Babylon, to their brethren, the Jews that were stiU left in Judah and Jerusalem, with an historical preface premised; in which it is related, how Baruch, being then at Babylon, did, in the name of the said king and the people, by their appointment, draw up the said epistle, and afterAverd read it to them for their approbation; and how that the collection being then made which is above mentioned, the epistle with the money was sent to Jerusalem. There are three copies of it, one in Greek, and the other two in Syriar^ whereof one agreeth with the Greek, but the other very much differs from it. But in what language it was originally written, or whether one of these ^e not the original, or which of them may be so, is what no one can say. Je- rome'^ rejected it wholly, because it is not to be found among the Jews, and calls the epistle annexed to it ■yivs^yf.xipr.v, i. e. a false or feigned writing. The most that can be said for it is, that Cyril of Jerusalem, and the Laodicean council, held A. D. 364, both name Baruch among the canonical books of holy scripture; for in both the catalogues which are given us by them of these canonical books, are these words, Jeremias cum Baruch, LamentaHonibus et Epistola, i. e. Jeremiah with Baruch, the Lamentations and the Epistle; whereby may seem to be meant the prophecies of Jeremiah, the Lamentations of Jeremiah, the book of Baruch, with the epistle of Jeremiah at the end of it, as they are all laid together in the vulgar Latin edition of the Bible. The answer given hereto is, that these words were intended by them to express no more than Jeremiah's prophecies and la- mentations only; that by the epistle is meant none other than the epistle in the twenty-ninth chapter of Jeremiah; and that Baruch's name is added, only be- cause of the part which he bore in collecting all these together, and adding the last chapter to the book of his prophecies; which is supposed to be Baruch's, because the prophecies of Jeremiah end with the chapter before, that is, the fifty-first, as it is positively said in the last words of it; and it must be said, that since neither in St. Cyril, nor in the Laodicean council, any of the other apocry- phal books are named, it is very unlikely that by the name of Baruch in either if them, should be meant the apocryphal book, so named; which hath the least /letence of any of them to be canonical, as it appeared by the difficulty which Jhe Trentine fathers" found to make it so. Jin. 5ti4. Zcckk. 5.] — In the fifth year of Zedekiah, which was also the fifth Vear of Jehoiachin's captivity, and the thirtieth from the great reformation made in the eighteenth year of king Josiah, EzekieP was called of God to be a prophet among the Jews of the captivity. And this same year he saw the vision of 1 In Comment, ad Baruch. 2 In Priefatione cd Jeremiam. 3 The Ilistorv of Trent, book 2. p. 344. 4 Ezek. i. l.&c. 108 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the four cherubimj, and the four wheels, which is related in the first chapter of his prophecies. The same year were also revealed unto him the three hundred and ninety years of God's utmost forbearance of the house of Israel/ auftd the forty years of God's utmost forbearance of the house of Judah, and the judgment which after that God would inflict upon both; as the whole is con tained in the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh chapters of his prophecies. In the same year died Cyaxares,^ king of Media, after he had reigned forty years; and Astyages his son, who in scripture is called Ahasuerus, reigned in his stead. In the same year died also Psammis,^ king of Eg3rpt, in an expedition whici. he made against the Ethiopians; and Apries his son, the same who in scripture is called Pharaoh-Hophra, succeeded him in that kingdom, and reigned twenty five years. •In the same year Ezekiel, being in a vision, was carried to Jerusalem, ana there shown all the several sorts of idolatiy which were practised by the Jews in that place, and had revealed unto him the punishments which God would inflict upon them for those abominations; and this makes up the subject of the eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh chapters of his prophecies. But at the same time, God promised to those of the captivity,'* who, avoiding these abomi nations, kept themselves steady and faithful to his service, that he would be- come a sanctuary unto them in the strange land where they were carried, and bring them back again unto the land of Israel, and there make them flourish in peace and righteousness as in former times. All which the prophet declared to the Jews of Babylon,^ among whom he dwelt. An. 592. Zedek. 7.] — In the seventh year of Zedekiah, God did, both by types and words of revelation, foreshow unto Ezekiel the taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, Zedekiah's flight from thence by night, the putting out of his eyes, and his imprisonment and death at Babylon; and also the carrying away of the Jews at the same time into captivity, the desolation of their country, and the many and great calamities which should befall them for their iniquities: and this is the subject of the twelfth chapter of his prophecies. And what is contained in the seven following chapters was also the same year revealed unto him, and relates mostly to the same subject. At this time Daniel was grown to so great a perfection and eminence in all righteousness, holiness, and piety of life, in the sight both of God and man, that he is by God himself equalled with Noah and Job, and reckoned with these two to make up the three, who of all the saints that had till then livea upon the earth, had the greatest power to prevail with God in their prayers for others. And yet he was then but a young man; for, allowing him to be eigh- teen when he was carried away to Babylon, among other children to be there educated, and bought up for the service of the king (and a greater will not agree with his character,) thirty-two at this time must have been the utmost of his age. But he dedicated the prime and vigour of his life to the service of God; and that is the best time to make proficiency therein. An. 591. Zedek. 8.] — Zedekiah, having in the seventh year of his reign sent ambassadors into Egypt,'' made a confederacy with Pharaoh-Hophra,kingof Eg}-pt; and therefore the next year, after breaking the oath of fidelity which he had sworn in the name of the Lord his God unto Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, he rebelled against him; which drew on him that war which ended in his ruin, md in the ruin of all Judah and Jerusalem with him, in that calamitous destruc- tion in which both were involved hereby. An. 590. Zedek. 9.] — In the ninth year of Zedekiah,^ Nebuchadnezzar having drawn together a great army out of all the nations under his dominion, marched against him to punish him for his perfidy and rebellion. But on his coming into Spiia. finding that the Ammonites had also entered into the same confederacy •^.'ek V. 4, &c. 2 Herodnt. lib. 1. 3 Ibid. lib. 2. 4 Ezek. xi. 15—21 5 Eiek.ii.25. ' »»e)r. xiv. 14. 20. 7 Ezek. xvii. 15. 8 2 Kings .\.vvi. 1. 2 Cliroii. xxxvi. 17. ler. xxxix. 1. lii. 4. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 109 with Egypt against him, he was in doubt' for some time whicli of these two people he should first fall upon, them or the Jews; whereon he committed the decision of the matter to his diviners, who consulting by the entrails of their sacrifices, their teraphim, and their arrows, determined for the cariying of the war against the Jews. This way of divining by arrows was usual among these idolaters. The manner of it, Jerome tells us, was thus;" they wrote on several arrows the names of the cities they intended to make war against, and then putting them promiscuously altogether into a quiver, they caused them to be drawn out thence in a manner as they drevi^ lots; and that city whose name was on the arrow first drawn, was the first they assaulted. And by this way of divi- nation, the war being determined against Judah, Nebuchadnezzar immediately marched his army into that country, and in a few days took all the cities thereof^ excepting only Lachish, Azekah, and Jerusalem, whereon the Jews at Jerusalem, being terrified with these losses, and the apprehensions of a siege then ready to be laid to that place, made a show of returning unto the Lord their God, and entered into a solemn covenant, thenceforth to serve him only, and faithfully observe all his laws. And in pursuance hereof, proclamation was made,^ that every man should let his man-servant, and every man his maid-servant, being an Hebrew or an Hebrewess, go free,^ according to the law of God; and every man did according hereto. On the tenth month of the same year," and the 10th day of the month (which was about the end of our December,) Nebuchadnezzar with all his numerous army laid siege to Jerusalem, and blocked it close up on every side; in memory whereof, the 10th day of Tebeth, which is their tenth month, hath ever since been observed by the Jews^ as a day of solemn fast even to this time. On the same 10th day of the tenth month,* in which this siege began at Jerusalem, was the same revealed to Ezekiel in Chaldea; where, by the type of a boiling pot, was foreshown unto him the dismal destruction which should .flereby be brought upon that city. And the same night," the wife of the prophet, who was the desire of his eyes, was, by a sudden stroke of death, taken from him; and he w^as forbid by God to make any manner of mourning for her, or appear with any of the usual signs of it upon him, thereby to foreshow, that the holy city, the temple, and the sanctuary, which were dearer to them than any wife can be in the eyes of her husband, should not only by a speedy and sudden stroke of destruction be taken from them, but that the calamity ensuing thereon should be such, and so great, as should not allow them so much as to mourn for the loss of them. Aa. 589. Zedek. 10.] — In the beginning of the tenth year of Zedekiah,'" the propliet Jeremiah, being sent of God declared unto him, that the Babylonians, who were now besieging of the city, should certainly take it, and burn it with fire, and take him prisoner and carry him to Babylon, and that he should die there. Whereon Zedekiah," being much displeased, put him in prison, and while he was shut up there, even in this very year, he purchased of Hanameel,'^ his uncle's son, a field in Anathoth; thereby to foreshow, that although Judah and Jerusalem should be laid desolate, and the inhabitants led into captivity, yet there should be a restoration, when lands and possessions should be again enjoyed by the legal owners of them, in the same manner as in former times. Pharaoh-Hophra,'^ coming out of Egypt with a great army to the relief of Zedekiah, Nebuchadnezzar raised the siege of Jerusalem to march against him. But before he went on this expedition he sent all the captive Jews which he then had in his camp to Babylon," the number of which were eight hundred and thirty-two persons. On the departure of the Chaldeans from Jerusalem, Jeremiah being again set at liberty, Zedekiah sent unto him Jehucal the son of Shelemiah,'^ and Zaphaniah ) Ezck. xxi. 19—24. 2 In Comment, in Ezek. xxi. 3 Jer. xxxiv. 7. 4 Jer. xxxiv. ^^W- 5 Deut. XV. 12. C 2 Kings xxv. I. Jer. xxxix. 1. lii. 4. 7 Zecli. viii. 19. 8 Kzek. xx-.v. 1, J. 9 Ibid. xxiv. 16— 18. 10 Jer. xxxiv. 11 Ibid. i.Txii. 1— 3. 12 Ibid. iix;i. ^-17. 13 Jer. sxxvii. 5. 14 Ibid. lii. 29. 15 Ibid, ii «vu. 3-10. 110 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the son of Maaseiah the priest, to inquire of the Lord by him, and to desire him to pray for him and his people. To whom the prophet returned an answer from God, that the Egyptians, whom they did depend upon would certainly deceive them; that their army would again return into Egypt, without giving them any help at all; and that thereon the Chaldeans would again renew the siege, take the city, and burn it with tire. But the general opinion of the people being, that the Chaldeans were gone for good and all, and would return no more to renew the war against them, they repented of the covenant of reformation,' which they had entered into before God, when they were in fear of them; and caused every man's servant, and every man's handmaid, whom they had set at liberty, again to return into servi- tude, to be unto them again for servants and for handmaids, contraiy to the law of the Lord and the covenant which they had lately entered into with him, to walk according to it. For which inhuman and unjust act,- and their impious breach of the covenant lately made with God, Jeremiah proclaimed liberty to the sword, and to the famine, and to the pestilence, to execute the wrath of God upon them and their king, and their princes, and all Judah and Jerusalem, to their utter destruction. While the Chaldeans were yet absent from Jerusalem, Jeremiah intending to retire to Anathoth,^ his native place, that thereby he might avoid the siege, which he knew would be again renewed on the return of the Chaldeans from their expedition against the Egyptians, put himself on his journey thither: but, as he was passing the gate of the city that led that way, the captain that kept guard there seized him for a deserter, as if his intentions were to fall away to the Chaldeans; whereon he was again put in prison in the house of Jonathan the scribe, which they had made the common jail of the city, where he re- mained many days. The Egyptians, on the coming of the Chaldeans against them, durst not stay to engage in batUe with so numerous and well-appointed an army; but, with- drawing on their approach,'' retired again into their own country, treacherously leaving Zedekiah and his people to perish in that war which they had drawn them into. Wliereon the prophet EzekieF reproaching them for their perfidy in thus becoming a staff of reed to those, whom by oaths and covenants of alhance they had made to lean and confide on them, denounced God's judgments against them, to be executed both upon king and people, in war, confusion, and desola- tion, for forty years ensuing, for the punishrnent hereof; and also foretold,'' how, after that, they should sink low, and become a mean and base people, and should no more have a prince of their own to reign over them. Which hath accord- ingly come to pass; for, not long after the expiration of the said forty years, they were made a province of the Persian empire, and have been governed by strangers ever since; for, on the failure of the Persian empire, they became sub- •ect to the Macedonians, and after them to the Romans, and after the Romans to the Saracens, and then to the Mamalukes, and are noAV a province of the Turkish empire. On the retreat of the Egyptians, Nebuchadnezzar returned to Jerusalem,' and again renewed the siege of that place; which lasted about a year, from the second investing of it to the time when it was taken. The siege being thus renewed, Zedekiah sent for Jeremiah out of prison,® to consult with him, and inquire of him, what word there was from God concern- ing the present state of his affairs; to which he found there was no other an swer, but that he was to be delivered into the hands of the king of Babylon. However, at the entreaty of the prophet, he was prevailed with not to send him back again to the common jail of the city, lest he should die there by reason of the noisomeness of the place; and therefore, instead thereof, he was ordered to 1 Jer. sxxiv. 11. 2 Ibid, xixiv. 17—22. 3 Ibid, xxivii. 11—15. 4 Jer. xxxvii. 7. 5 Ezek. xxir. C Ibid. xxx. 13. 7 Jer. xxxrii. 8. 8 Ibid, xxxvii. 17—21. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. Ill the prison of the king's court, where he continued, with the allowance of a cer- tain portion of bread out of the common store, till the city was taken. Zedekiah, finding himself in the siege much pressed by the Chaldeans, sent messengers to Jeremiah,' farther to inquire of the Lord by him concerning the present war. To which he answered, that the word of the Lord concerning him was, that God, being very much provoked against him and his people for their iniquities, would fight against the city, and smite it; that both king and people shoukl be delivered into the hands of the king of Babylon; that those who con- tinued in the city, during the siege, should perish by the pestilence, the famine, and the sword; but that those who should go out, and fall to the Chaldeans, should have their lives given them for a prey. At which answer,- several of the princes and chief commanders about the king, being very much offended, pressed the king against him, as one that weakened the hands of the men of war, and of all the people, and sought their hurt more than their good: whereon he being delivered into their hands, they cast him into a dungeon, where he must have perished, but that Ebedmelech,* an eunuch of the court, having en- treated the king in his behalf, delivered him thence; for which charitable act he Dad a message sent him from God, of mercy and deliverance unto him. After his Zedekiah sending for Jeremiah* into the temple, there secretly inquired of nim; but had no other answer than what had been before given him, saving only, that the prophet told him, that if he would go forthwith and deliver himself into the hands of the king of Babylon's princes, who commanded at thefcarrying on of the siege, this was the only way whereby he might save both himself and the city; and he earnestly pressed him hereto. But Zedekiah would not hearken unto him herein; but sent him back again to prison, and after that no more con- sulted with him. An. 588. Zedek. 11.] — In the eleventh year of Zedekiah, in the beginning of the year, God declared, by the prophet Ezekiel, his judgments against Tyre, for their insulting on the calamitous state of Judah and Jerusalem, foreshowing, that the same calamities should be also brought upon them by the same Nebuchadnez- zar, into whose hands God would deliver them; and this is the subject of the twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, and twenty-eighth chapters of his prophecies; in the last of which God particularly upbraided Ithobal, then king of Tyre, with the insolent and proud conceit he had of his own knowledge and understanding, having puffed up himself herewith, as if he were wiser than Daniel; and that there was no secret that could be hid from him:" which showeth to how great a height the fame of Daniel's wisdom was at that time grown, since it now became spoken of, by way of proverb, through all the east; and yet, according to the ac- count before given us of his age, he could not at this time exceed thirty-six years. And, in the conclusion of the twenty-eighth chapter, the like judgments are de- nounced also against Sidon, and for the same reason. The same year God declared, by the same prophet, his judgments against pha- raoh and the Egyptians; that he would bring the king of Babylon against them, and deliver them into his hands; and that, notwithstanding their greatness and pride, they should no more escape his revenging hand than the Assyrians had done before them, who were higher and greater than they. And this is the subject of the tliirtieth and thirty-first chapters of his projjhecies. In the fourth month, on the 9th day of the month, of the same eleventh year of Zedekiah, Jerusalem was taken by the Chaldeans,'' after the siege had lasted from their last setting down before it, about a year. Hereon Zedekiah, with his men of war, fled away; and having broken through the camp of the enemy, en- deavoured to make his escape over Jordan; but being pursued after, he was over- taken in the plains of Jericho: whereupon all his army being scattered from him, he was taken prisoner, and carried to the king of Babylon, at Riblah in Syria, where he then resided; who having caused his sons, and all his princes that were 1 Jer. xxi. 1—14. 2 ic.t. x.Txviii. 1— C. i IbiJ. xxxviii. 7—13. A Ibid, xx.wiii. 14—23. S Ezek. xxviii. 3. 0 2 Kings xxv. 4. 2Chron. xxxvi. 17. Jer. yxxix. 2—10. lii. 6—11. 112 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF taken with him, to be slain before his face, commanded his eyes to be put out, and tlien bound him in fetters of brass, and sent him to Babylon, where he died in prison: and hereby was fulfilled the prophesy of the prophet Ezekiel concern- ing him,' that he should be brought to Babylon in the land of the Chaldeans, yet should not see the place, though he shovild die there. In the fifth month, on the 7th day of the month (i. e. toward the end of our July,) came Nebuzaradan,^ captain of the guards to the king of Babylon, to Je- rusalem; and, after having taken out all the vessels of the house of the Lord, and gathered together all the riches that could be found, either in the king's house, or in any other houses of the city, he did, on the 10th day of the same month, pursuant to the command of his master, set both the temple and city on fire, and absolutely consumed and destroyed them both, overthrowing all the walls, fortresses, and towers, belonging thereto, and wholly razing and levelling to the ground every building therein, till he had brought all to a thorough and perfect desolation; and so it continued for fifty-two years after, till by the favour of Cyrus, the Jews being released from their captivity, and restored again to their own land, repaired these ruins, and built again their holy city. In memory of this calamity, they keep two fasts even to this day, the 17th of the fourth month (which falls in our June) for the destruction of Jerusalem, and the 9th of the fifth month (which falls in our July) for the destruction of the temple; both which are made mention of in the prophecies of the prophet Zechariah,^ under the names of the fast of the fourth month, and the fast of the fifth month, and are there spoken of as annually observed from the destruction of Jerusalem to this time, which was seventy years after. Josephus remarks,* that the burning of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar happened on the very same day of the year on which it was afterward again burned by Titus. Nebuzaradan having thus destroyed the city and the temple of Jerusalem, made aU the people he found there captives. Of these he took Saraiah the high- priest,* and Zephaniah the second priest, and about seventy others of the princi- pal persons he found in the place, and carried them to Riblah to Nebuchadnez- zar, who caused them all there to be pu.t to death. Of the rest of the people,® he left the poorer sort to till the ground and dress their vineyards, and made Ge- daliah the son of Ahikam, governor over them, and all the other he carried away to Babylon. But concerning Jeremiah, Nebuchadnezzar gave particular charge to Nebuza- radan,'' that he should offer him no hurt, but look weU to him, and do for him in all things according as he should desire. And therefore as soon as he came to Jerusalem, with commission to destroy the place, he and the princes that were with him sent and took him out of prison, where he had lain bound from the time that Zedekiah had put him there, and restored him to his liberty; and hav- mg carried him with him as far as Ramah, on his return to Nebuchadnezzar he gave him his option, whether he would go with him to Babylon, where he should be well looked after and maintained at the king's charge, or else remain in the land; and he having chosen the latter, Nebuzaradan gave him victuals and a re- ward, and sent him back to Gedaliah the son of Ahikam, with an especial charge to take care of him. After Nebuchadnezzar was returned to Babylon,* all those who before for fear of the Chaldeans had taken refuge among the neighbouring nations, or had hid themselves in the fields and the deserts, after their escape, on the dispersion of Zedekiah's army in the plains of Jericho, hearing that Gedaliah was made governor of the land, resorted to him; and he having promised them protection, and sworn unto them that they should be safe under his government, they settled themselves again in the land, and gathered in the fruits of it. The chief among these were Johanan and Jonathan the sons of Kereah, Seraiah the son of Tan- humeth, Azariah the son of Hoshaiah, Ishmael the son of Nethaniah, and others. 1 Ezek. xii. 13. 2 2Kings xxv. 8— 17. Jer. lii. 12— 23. 3 Zech. viii. 19. 4 De Bello Judaico, lib. vii. c. Ift 5 2 Kings xxv. 18—21. Jer. lii. 24—27. 6 2 Kings xvi. 22—25. Jer. xxxix. 9, 10. lii. 15, 10. 7 Jer. xixix. 11—14. xl. 1—6. 8 Jer. xl. 7—12. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 113 But Ishmael came to him only out of a treacherous design;' for being of the seed royal, he reckoned to make himself king of the land now the Chaldeans were gone; and for the accompUshing of it had formed a conspiracy to kill Ge- daliah, and seize the gov'ernment; and Baalis the king of the Ammonites wat, confederated with him lierein. But Johanan the son of Kereah having got no- tice of it, he and all the chief men of the rest of the people went to Gedaliah, and informed him of it, proposing to kill Ishmael, and thereby deliver him from the mischief that w^as intended against him. But Gedaliah being of a very be- nign disposition, and not easy to entertain jealousies of any one, would not be- lieve this of Ishmael, but stiU carried on a friendly correspondence with him; of which IshmaeF taking the advantage, came to him in the seventh month, which answers to our September, when the people were most of them scattered abroad from him to gather in the fruits of the land; and while they were eating and drinking together at an entertainment, which Gedaliah had in a very friendly manner made for him and his men, they rose upon him and slew him, and at the same time slew also a great number of the Jews and Chaldeans whom they found with him in Mizpah, and took the rest captive. And the next day, hearing of eighty men who were going on a religious account with offerings and incense to the house of God,^ they craftily drew them into Mizpah, and there slew then- all, excepting ten of them, who offered their stores for the redemption of their lives. And then taking with him all the captives, among whom were the daugh- ters of king Zedekiah, they departed thence to go over to the Ammonites. But Johanan the son of Kereah, and the rest of the captains, hearing of this wicked fact, immediately armed as many of the people as they could get together, and pursued after Ishmael; and, having overtaken him at Gibeon, retook all the cap- tives; but he and eight of his men escaped to the Ammonites. This murder of Gedaliah happened two months after the destruction of the city and temple of Jerusalem, in the said seventh month, and on the 30th day of the month. For that day the Jews have kept as a fast in commemoration of this calamity ever since; and Zechariah' also makes mention of it as observed in his time, calling it by the^'^iame of the fust of the seventh month; and they had reason to keep a fast for it, for it was the completion of their ruin. After this great misfortune, Johanan' the son of Kereah, and the people that were left, fearing the king of Babylon, because of the murder of Gedaliah whom he had made governor of the land, departed from Mizpah, to flee into the land of Egypt, and came to Bethlehem in their way thither: where they stopping a while, consulted the prophet Jeremiah (whom they had carried with them) about their intended journey, and desired him to inquire of God in their behalf; who, after ten days, having received an answer from God, called them together, and told them, that if they would tarry in the land, all should go well with them, and God would show mercy unto them, and incline the heart of the king of Babylon to be favourable unto them; but if they would not hearken unto the word of the Lord, but would, notwithstanding his word now delivered to the contrary, set their faces to go into the land of Egypt, that then the sword and famine should follow close after them thither, and they should be all there de- stroyed. But all this was of no effect with them: for their hearts being violendy bent to go into Egypt, they would not hearken to tlie word of the Lord spoken to them by the mouth of his prophet, but told Jeremiah, that the answer which he gave them was not from God, but was suggested to him by Baruch the son of Neriah for their hurt. And therefore Johanan the son of Kereah, and the rest of the cai)tains of the forces, took all tlie remnant of Judah that were re- turned, from all nations whither they had been driven, again to dwell in the land, and all thv; persons whom Nebuchadnezzar had left with Gedaliah, oven men, women, and children, and the king's daughters, and also Jeremiah the 1 Jer. xl. 13—10. 2 Ibid. xli. 3 i. e. at Jerii.salciii; t'nr thnugh tho temple was dnstroyed, yet the people that were left continued Lo offer sacrifices, and worship there on the place where it stood, as long as they remained in the land. 4 Zech. viii. 10. 5 Jer. xlii. Vol. I.— 15 H4 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF prophet, and Baruch the son of Neriah, and went into Egypt, and settled in that country, till the plagues and judgments which God had threatened them with, for their disobedience to his word, there overtook them, to their utter destruction And thus ended this unfortunate year, in which the temple and city of Jerusa- lem were destroyed, and the whole land of Judah brought in a manner to utter desolation for the sins thereof. BOOK II. Jin. 587. J\''ebuchadnezzar 18.] — In the twelfth year of the captivity of Jehoia- chin, one escaping from Jerusalem came to Ezekiel in the land of the Chaldeans,* and told him of the destruction of that city: whereon he prophecied desolation to the rest of the land of Judah, and utter destruction to the remainder of the Jews who were left therein. The same year Ezekiel prophesied against Egypt, and Pharaoh-Hophra, the king thereof, that God would bring against him Nebuchadnezzar, king of Baby- lon, who should lay the land desolate; and that he and all his armies should be brought to destruction, and perish, like as other nations whom God had cut off for their iniquities: which is the subject of the thirty-second chapter of his pro- phecies. The Jews which went into Egypt," having settled at Migdol, and Tahpanhes, and Noph, and in the country of Pathros {i. e. at Magdalum by the Red Sea,^ at* Daphne near Pelusium, at Memphis, and in the country of Thebais,) gave them- selves there wholly up to idolatry,'* worshipping the queen of heaven, and other false deities of the land, and burning incense unto them, without having any- more regard to the Lord their God. Whereon the prophet Jeremiah cried aloud against this impiety,'^ unto those among whom he lived, that is, those who had settied in the land of Pathros, or Thebais.'' (For this being the farthest from Judea of all the places where they had obtained settlements in that country, they had carried him thither, the better to take from him all opportunity of again re- turning from them.) But all his exhortations were of no other effect, than to draw from them a declaration, that they would worship the Lord no more, but would go on in their idolatry;' for they told him, that it had been best with them, when they practised it in Judah and Jerusalem; that it was since their leaving off, that all their calamities had happened unto them; and that therefore they would no more hearken unto any thing that he should deliver unto them in the name of the Lord. Whereon the word of the Lord came unto the prophet,** denouncing utter destruction unto them by the sword, and by the famine, that thereby all of them, that is, all the men of Judah then dwelling in Egj^pt, should be consumed, ex- cepting only some few, who should make their escape into the land of Judah. And, for a sign hereof, it was foretold unto them by the same prophet, that Pha- raoh-Hophra, king of Egypt, in whom they trusted, should be given into the hands of his enemies who sought his life, in the sa:ne manner as Zedekiah was given into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar that sought his life; that so, when this should be brought to pass in their eyes, they might be assured thereby, that aU these words which the Lord had spoken against them shoidd certainly be ful- filled upon them; as accordingly they were, about eighteen years afterward. After this there is no more mention of Jeremiah. It is most likely that he died in Egypt soon after, he being then much advanced in years (for he had now prophecied forty-one years from the thirteenth of Josiah,) and also m.uch broken (as we may well suppose) by the calamities which happened to himself and his countiy. TertuUian, Epiphanius, Dorotheus, Jerome, and Zonaras, teUs us, that he was stoned to death by the Jews, for preaching against their idolatry. And 1 Ezek. xxxiii. 21—20. 2 Jer. xliv. 1. 3 Vide Boch. Phal. part I. lib. 4. c. 27. 4 Jer. xliv. 8. 15 -19 5 Ibid. xliv. 1—15. 6 Ibid. xliv. 15. 7 Ibid. xliv. 16—19. 8 Ibid. xlix. 26—30. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 115 ol this some interpret St. Paul's £A.5:« Herodotus, lib. 2. 10 Ezek. xxix. 9. 11 Herodotus, lib. 2. Diodorus Sicuhis, lib. 1. part 2. Jer. xlvii. 1. "^ Herodotus, ibid, niodorus ibid 13 Herndot. lib. 1. Ctesias, Justin, lib. I.e. 2. 14 Q. Curtius. lib. 5. c. I. Abydenus ex Megasthene apud Euseb. I'rscp. Evang. lib. !). 15 Berosus apud Joseph. Antiq. lib. 10. c. At. Abydenus apud Eu.seb.,Pra;p. Evang. lib. 9. 120 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF city; 2dly, the temple of Belus; 3dly, his palace, and the hanging-gardens in it; 4thly, the banks of the river; and, 5thly, the artificial lake, and artificial canals made for the draining of that river. In the magnificence and expense of which works he much exceeded whatsoever had been done by any king before him. And, excepting the walls of China, nothing like it hath been since attempted, whereby any one else can be equalled to him herein. First, the walls were every way prodigious: for they w^e in thickness eighty- seven feet, in height three hundred and fifty feet, and in compass four hundred and eighty furlongs, which make sixty of our miles.' This is Herodotus's ac- count of them, who w^as himself at Babylon, and is the most ancient author that hath wrote of this matter. And although there are othei's that differ from him herein, yet the most that agree in any measure of those walls give us the same, or very near the same,^ that he doth. Those who lay the height of them at fifty cubits, speak of them only as they were after the time of Darius Hystaspis* for the Babylonians having revolted from him, and in confidence of their strong walls stood out against him in a long siege, after he had taken the place, to pre- vent their rebellion for the future,^ he took away their gates, and beat down their walls to the height last mentioned; and beyond this they were never after raised. These walls were draw^n round the city in the form of an exact square,^ each side of which was one hundred and twenty furlongs, or fifteen miles in length, and all built of large bricks, cemented together wath bitumen,'* a glutinous slime, , arising out of the earth in that country, Avhich binds in building much stronger and firmer than lime, and soon grows much harder than the brick or stones them- selves which it cements together. These walls were surrounded on the outside with a vast ditch filled with water, and lined with bricks on both sides, after the manner of a scarp or counterscarp, and the earth, Avhich was dug out of it, made the bricks, wherewith the walls were built; and therefore, from the vast height and breadth of the walls may be inferred the greatness of the ditch. In every side of this great square were twenty-five gates, that is, a hundred in all, which were all made of solid brass; and hence it is, that when God promised to Cyrus the conquest of Babylon, he tells him, " that he w^ould break in pieces before him the gates of brass." (Isa. xlv. 2.) Between every two of these gates were three towers, and four more at the four corners of this great square, and three between each of these corners and the next gate on either side; and every one of these towers was ten feet higher than the walls. But this is to be understood only of those parts of the wall where there was need of towers:* for some parts of them lying against morasses always full of water, w^here they could not be approached by an enemy, they had there no need of any towers at all for their defence; and therefore in them there were none built; for the w^hole number of them amounted to no more than two hundred and fifty; whereas, had the same uniform order been observed in their disposition all round, there must have been many more. From the twenty-five gates on each side of this great square, went twenty-five streets in straight lines to the gates, Avhich were di- rectly over against them in the other side opposite to it. So that the whole number of the streets were fifty, each fifteen miles long, whereof twenty-five went one Avay, and twenty-five the other, directly crossing each other at right angles.*^ And, besides these, there were also four half streets, which were built 1 Heroddtus, lib. 1. 2 Plinius, lib. 6. c. 26. Philostratus, lib. 1. c. 18. 3 Herodot. lib. 3. 4 Ibid. lib. ]. U. Curtius. lib. 5. c. 1. Strabo, lib. 16. Diod. Sic. lib. 3. Ariamis do .Expeditione Alex- andri, lib. 7. 5 Diodoriis Siciilus, lil). 2. 6 Herodotus, lib 1. Much, .iccording to this model, hath W^illiam Pcnn the quaker laid out the ground for Ills city of PhiladHphia, in Pennsylvania; and were it all built according to that design, it would be the fair- est and best city in all America, and not much behind any other in the whole world. For it lieth betweep two navigable rivers, at the distance of two miles from their confluence, and consists of thirty streets, ten of which being drawn from river to river are two miles long, and the twenty others being drawn across the Raid ten, and cutting them at right angles, are a mile long. In the midst of the whole is left a square of ten acres, and in the middle of the four quarters of the town, into which it is equally divided, is a square of five acres; which void places are designed for the building churches, schools, and other public buildings, and also to serve for the inhabitants to walk, and other ways divert themselves in them, in the same manner as Moor- fields do in London. Above two thousand houses are in this place already built, and when it shall be wholly built according to the plan above ijientioned, it will be the glory of all that part of the world; and if t)M TPIE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. !?■ brt of one side, as having the wall on the other. These went round the foui sides of the city next the walls, and were each of them two hundred feet broad, and tne rest were about one hundred and fifty.' By these streets thus crossing "^ach othej, the whole city was cut out into six hundred and seventy-six squares each of which was four furlongs and a half on every side, that is, two miles and a quarter in compass. Round these squares, on every side, toward the streets, stood the houses, all built three or four stories high, and beautified with all manner of adornments toward the streets." The space within, in the middle of each square, was all void ground, employed for yards, gardens, and other sue' uses. A branch of the River Euphrates did run quite across the city, en- tering in on the north side, and going out on the south; over which, in the middle of the city, was a bridge of a furlong in length,* and thirty feet in breadth, built with wonderful art,'' tr. supply the defect of a foundation in the bottom of the river, which was all sandy. At the two ends of the bridge were two palaces,* the old palace on the east side, and the new palace on the west side of the river; the former of these took up four of the squares above men- tioned,'^ and the other nine of them;^ and the temple of Belus, which stood next the old palace, took up another of these squares. The whole city stood on a large flat or plain, ^ in a very fat and deep soil. That part of it which was on the east side of the river" was the old city; the other on the west side was added by Nebuchadnezzar. Both together were included within that vast square I have mentioned. The pattern hereof seemeth to have been taken from Nine- veh, that having been exactly four hundred and eighty furlongs round, as this was."* For Nebuchadnezzar having, in conjunction with his father, destroyed that old royal seat of the Assyrian empire, resolved to make this, which he in- tended should succeed it in that dignity, altogether as large; only, whereas Nineveh was in the form of a parallelogram," he made Babylon in that of an exact square; which figure rendered it somewhat the larger of the two. To fill this great and large city with inhabitants, was the reason that Nebuchadnezzar, out of Judea and other conquered countries, carried so great a number of Cap- tives thither. And could he have made it as populous as it was great, there was no country in all the east could better, than that in which it stood, have main tained so great a number of people, as must then have been in it: for the fer- tility of this province was so great, that it yielded to the Persian kings, during their reign over Asia,'" half as much as did all that large empire besides; the common return of their tillage being between two and three hundred fold every crop. But it never happened to have been fully inhabited;'* it not having had time enough to grow up thereto: for, within twenty-five years after the death of Nebuchadnezzar, the royal seat of the empire was removed from thence to Shu- shan by Cyrus; which did put an end to the growing glory of Babylon; for after that it never more flourished. When Alexander came to Babylon, Curtius tells us, no more than ninety furlongs of it was then built;'* which can no otherwise be understood, than of so much in length; and if we allow the breadth to be aa country round it comes to be thoroughly inhabiteJ, the great con venioncy of its situation for traile, by reason of the two navigable rivers on which it stands, and the great River Delaware, into which both fall within two miles of it, will soon draw people enough thither, not only to finish the scheme, which hath been laid of it by its first founder, but also to enlarge it by such additions on each sirlo, as to make its breadth answer its length: and then, barring the walls and greatness of Babylon, it will imitate it in all thitigs else, and in the conveniency of its situation far exceed it. But this is to bo understood as a comparing of a small thing with a great. For though Philadelphia were built and inhabited to the utmost I have mentioned, that is, to the full extent of two miles in breadth as well as in length, yet fifty-six of such cities might stand within those walls that encompassed Babylon. 1 Tiro plrthra. saith Diodorus, that is, two hundred feet; for a plethrum contained one hundred feet. 2 Uerodolus, lib. 4. Philostratus, lib. 1. 3 Strabo saith. that the river which passed through Babylon was a furlong broad (lib. 10;) but Diodorus saith (lib. 2,) that the bridge was five furlongs long: if so, it must be nnich longer than the river was broad. 4 Diodorus Siculus, lib. 2. U. Cnrtiua, lib. .5. c. 1. Philostratus, lib. 1. c. 18. Herodotus, lib. 1. 5 Berosus apud Joseph. Antiq lib. 10. c. H. Herodotus, lib. 1. Diodorus Siculus, lib. 2. Q.- Curtius, lib 5. c. 1. Philostrauis, lib. 1. c. 18. 6 U was thirty furlongs in compass. Diodorus Sicul. lib. 2. 7 U was sixty furlongs in compass. Diodur. ibid. 8 Herodotus, lib. 1. 9 Diodor. Sic. lib. 2. JO iDid. 11 Two of its sides were each one hundred and tifly furlongs long, and the other but eighty each. Dioaor4 ibi(C 13 Herodotus, lib. 1. 13 d. Curtius, lib. 5. c. 1. Vol. 1.-16 12^ CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF much as the length (which is the utmost that can be allowed,) it will follow, inif no more than eight thousand one hundred square furlongs were then built upon; but the whole space within the walls contained fourteen thousand four hundred square furlongs; and therefore there must have been six thousand three hundred square furlongs that were unbuilt, which Curtius teUs us' were plouo-hed and sown. And, besides this, the houses were not contiguous, but all built with a void space on each side between house and house. And the same historian tells us, this was, done because this way of building seemed to them the safest. His words are: " Ac ne totam quidem urbem tectis occupaverunt, per nonao-inta stadia habitatur; nee omnia continua sunt, credo quia tutius visum est pluribus locis spargi:" i. e. " Neither was the whole city built upon, for the space of ninety furlongs it Avas inhabited; but the houses were not contiguous, because they thought it safest to be dispersed in many places distant from each other." — Which words (they thought it safest) are to be understood, not as if they did this for the better securing of their houses from fire, as some interpret them, but chiefly for the better preserving of health. For hereby, in cities situated in such hot countries, those suffocations and other inconveniences are avoided, which must necessarily attend such as there dwell in houses closely built to- gether. For which reason Delhi, the capital of India, and several other cities in those warmer parts of the world, are thus built; the usage of those plaices be- ing, that such a stated space of ground be left void between every house that is built in them. And old Rome was built after the same manner. So that, put- ting all this together, it will appear that Babylon Avas so large a city, rather in scheme than in reality. For, according to this account, it must be by much the larger part that was never built; and therefore, in this respect, it must give place to Nineveh, which was as many furlongs in circuit as the other, and without any void ground m it that we are told of. And the number of its infants at the same time, which could not discern between their right hand and their left, which the scriptures tell us were one hundred and twenty thousand in the time of Jonah, dotk sufficiently prove it was fully inhabited. It was intended, indeed, that Babylon should have exceeded it in every thing. But Nebuchadnezzar did not live long enough, nor the Babylonish empire last long enough, to finish the scheme that was first drawn of it. The next great work of Nebuchadnezzar at Babylon was the temple of Belus.^ But that which was most remarkable in it was none of his work, but was built many ages before. It was a wonderful tower that stood in the middle of it. At the foundation, it was a square of a furlong on each side,^ that is, half a mile in the Avhole compass, and consisted of eight towers, one lauilt above over the other. Some following a mistake of the Latin version of Herodotus, wherein the lowest of these towers is said to be a furlong thick and a furlong high, will have each of these towers to have been a furlong high, which amounts to a mile in the whole. But the Greek of Herodotus, which is the authentic text of that author, saith no such thing, but only, that it was a furlong long and a furlong broad, without mentioning any thing of its height at all. And Strabo, in his high description of it, calling it a pyramid, because of its decreasing or bench- ing-in at every tower, saith of the whole,'' that it was a furlong high, and a fur- long on every side. To reckon every tower a furlong, and the whole a mile high, would shock any man's belief, were the authority of both these authors for it, much more when there is none at all. Taking it only as it is described by Strabo, it was prodigious enough: for, according to his dimensions only, without adding any thing farther, it was one of the most wonderful works in the world, and much exceeding the greatest of the pyramids of Egypt, which hath been thought to excel all other works in the world besides. For although it fell short of that pyramid at the basis" (where that was a square of seven hundred feet on every side, and this but of six-hundred,) yet it far exceeded it in the height; the 1 Q.. Curtius, lib. 5. c. 1. 2 Berosusapud Joseph. Aiitiq. lib. 10. c. II. 3 Herodot. lib. 1 4 Strabo. lib. 16. .'5 See Mr. Greaves' Description of Ibe Pyramids p Tip fiP THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 123 perpendicular measure of the said pyramid being no more than four hundred and eighty-one feet, whereas that of the other was full six hundred; and there- fore, it was higher than that pyramid by one hundred and nineteen feet, which is one quarter of the whole. And therefore, it w^as not without reason that Bochartus asserts it to have been the very same tower which was there built at the confusion of tongues.' For it was prodigious enough to answer the scripture description of it; and it is particularly attested by several authors to have been all built of bricks and bitumen," as the scriptures teh us the tower of Babel was. Herodotus saith, that the going up to it was by stairs on the outside round it; from whence it seems most likely, that the whole ascent to it was by the benching-in, drawn in a sloping line from the bottom to the top eight times round it; and that this made the appearance of eight towers, one above another, in the same manner as we have the tower of Babel commonly described in pictures; saving only, that whereas that is usually pictured round, this was square. For such a benching-in, drawn in a slope eight times round in manner as aforesaid, would make the whole seem on every side as consisting of eight towers, and the upper tower to be so much less than that next below it, as the breadth of the benching-in amounted to. These eight towers being as so many stories one above another, were each of them seventy-five feet high, and in them were many great rooms w'ith arched roofs supported by pillars. All which were made parts of the temple, after the tower became consecrated to that idolatrous use. The uppermost story of all was that which was most sacred, and where their chiefest devotions were performed. Over the whole, on the top of the tower, was an observatory, by the benefit of which it was,^ that the Baby- lonians advanced their skill in astronomy beyond all other nations, and came to so early a perfection in it, as is related. For when Alexander took Babylon, Calisthenes the philosopher, who accompanied him thither, found they had astronomical observations for one thousand nine hundred and three years back- ward from that time: which carrieth up the account as high as the one hundred and fifteenth year after the flood, which was within fifteen years after the tower of Babel was built. For the confusion of tongues, which follow^ed immediately after the building of that tower, happened in the year wherein Peleg was born, which was one hundred and one years after the flood, and fourteen years after that these observations began. This account Calisthenes sent from Babylon into Greece to his master Aristotle, as Simplicius, from the authority of Porphyry, delivers it unto us in his second book De Coelo. Till the time of Nebuchad- nezzar, the temple of Belus contained no more than this tower only, and the rooms in it served all the occasions of that idolatrous w^orship. But he enlarged it^ by vast buildings erected round it, in a sqare of two furlongs on every side,^ and a mile in circumference, which was one thousand eight hundred feet more than the square of the temple of Jerusalem:'' for that was but three thousand feet round, whereas this was, according to this account, four thousand eight hundred. And on the outside of all these buildings, there w^as a W'all enclosing the whole, which may be supposed to have been of equal extent with the square in which it stood, that is, two miles and a half in compass, in w^hich were several gates leading into the temple, all of solid brass;^ and the brazen sea, the brazen pillars, and the other brazen vessels, which were carried to Babylon from the temple of Jerusalem, seem to have been employed to the making of them. For it is said, that Nebuchadnezzar did put all the sacred vessels, which he carried from Jerusa- lem, into the house of his" god at Babylon,^ that is, into this house or temple of Bel; for that was the name of the great god of the Babylonians. He is supposed to have been the same with Nimrod, and to have been called Bel from his dorai- 1 Phaleg. part 1. lib. I. c. 9. 3 Strain), lib. Ki. Heroilotus, lib. 1. Dior. Sic. lib. 2. Arrian. de Expeditione Alexandri, lib. 7 3 Diodor. Sic. lib. 2. p. 'JH. 4 Berosiis apud Joseph. Antiq. lib. 10. c. 11. 5 Herodot ub. 1. 6 For it was a square of five liundred cubits on every side, and two thousand in tie w);olf, «. <. three thousand feet. See Lightfoot's Description of the Temple of Jerusalem. 7 Herodot lib. 1. 8 Dan. i. 2. 2 Chron. xxxvi. 7. 124 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF nion, and Nimrod from his rebellion: for Bel, or Baal, which is the same name, signifieth lord, and Nimrod, a rebel, in the Jewish and Chaldean languages: the former was his Babjdonish name, by reason of his empire in that place, ar.d the latter his scripture name, by reason of his rebellion, in revolting from God to follow his own wicked designs. This temple stood till the time of Xerxes: but he, on his return from his Grecian expedition, demolished the whole of it,^ and laid it all in rubbish; having first plundered it of all its immense riches, among which were several images or statutes of massy gold, and one of them is said by Diodorus Siculus^ to have been forty feet high, which might perchance have been that which Nebuchadnezzar consecrated in the plains of Dura. Nebuchadnezzar's golden image is said, indeed, in scripture, to have been sixty cubits, i. e. ninety feet high, but that must be understood of the image and pedestal both together: for that image being said to have been but six cubits broad or thick, it is impossible that the image could have been sixty cubits high; for that makes its height to be ten times its breadth or thickness, which exceeds all the pro- portions of a man, no man's height being above six times his thickness, measuring the slenderest man livino; at his waist. But where the breadth of this imagre was measured is not said: perchance it was from shoulder to shoulder; and then the proportion of six cubits' breadth wiU bring down the height exactly to the measure which Diodorus hath mentioned: for the usual height of a man being four and a half of his breadth between the shoulders, if the image were six cubits broad between the shoulders, it must, according to this proportion, have been twenty-seven cubits high, which is forty feet and a half Besides, Diodorus tells us.^ that this image of forty feet high, contained one thou- sand Babylonish talents of gold, which, according to Pollux (who, in his Onomasticon, reckons a Babylonish talent to contain seven thousand Attic drachms, i. e. eight hundred and seventy-five ounces,) amounts to three millions and a half of our money."* • But, if we advance the height of the statue to ninety feet Avithout the pedestal, it will increase the value to a sum incredible; and therefore, it is necessary to take the pedestal also into the height mentioned by Daniel. Other images and sacred utensils were also in that temple, all of solid gold. Those that are particularly mentioned by Diodorus contain five thousand and thirty talents, which, with the one thousand talents in the image above mentioned, amount to above twenty-one millions of our money. And, besides, this, we may well suppose the value of as much more in treasure and utensils not mentioned, which was a vast sum. But it was the collection of near two thousand years; for so long that temple had stood. All this Xerxes took away when he destroyed it. And, perchance to recruit himself with the plunder, after the vast expense which he had been at in his Grecian expedition, was that which chiefly excited him to the destruction of it, what other reason soever might be pretended for it. Alexander, on his return to Babylon from his Indian expedition,^ proposed again to have rebuilt it; and, in order hereto, he did set ten thousand men on work to rid the place of its rubbish: but, after they had laboured herein two months, Alexander died, before they had perfected much of the undertaking; and this did put an end to all farther proceedings in that design. Had he lived, and made that city the seat of his empire, as it was sup- posed he would,® the glory of Babylon Avould no doubt have been advanced by him to the utmost height that ever Nebuchadnezzar intended to have brought it to, and it would again have been the queen of the east. Next this temple, on the same east side of the river,' stood the old palace of the kings of Babylon, being four miles in compass. Exactly over against it, on 1 Strabo, lib. 16. p. 738. Hcrodot. lib. 1. Arrianus de Expeditione Alexandri, lib. 7. 2 Lib. 2. 3 Ibid. 4 Tliis is according to the lowest computation, valuing an Attic drachm at no more than seven-pence halfpenny, whereas Dr. Bernard reckons it to be eight-pence fartliing, which would mount the sum much higher. 5 Strabo, lib. 16. Joseph, contra Apionem, lib. 1. Arrianus de Expeditione Alexandri, lib. 7. 6 Strabo, lib. 15. p. 731. 7 Diodor. Sic. lib. 2. Philostratus, lib. 1. c. 18 THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 125 the other side of the river, stood the new palace;' and this was that winch Ne^ buchadnezzar built." It was four times as big as the former, as being eight miles in compass."* It was surrounded with three walls, one within another, and strongly fortified, according to the way of those times. But what was most wonderful in it were the hanging-gardens, which were of so celebrated a name among the Greeks. They contained a square of four plethra (that is, of four hundred feet) on every side,'' and were carried up aloft into the air, in the man- ner of several large terraces, one above another, till the highest equalled the height of the walls of the city. The ascent was from terrace to terrace, by stairs ten feet wide. The whole pile was sustained by vast arches built upon arches, one above another, and strengthened by a wall, surrounding it on every side, of twenty-two feet in thickness. The floors of every one of these terraces were laid in the same manner; which was thus: — On the top of the arches were first laid large flat stones, sixteen feet long, and four broad, and over them was a layer of reed, mixed with a great quantity of bitumen, over which were two rows of bricks, closely cemented together by plaster, and then over all were laid thick sheets of lead; and, lastly, upon the lead was laid the mould of the gar- den: and all this floorage was contrived to keep the moisture of the mould from running away down through the arches. The mould or earth laid hereon was of that depth, as to have room enough for the greatest trees to take rooting in it; and such were planted all over it in every terrace, as were also all other trees, plants, and flowers, that were proper for a garden of pleasure. In the upper terrace there was an aqueduct or engine, whereby water was drawn up out of the river, which from thence watered the whole garden. Amyitis, the wife of Nebuchadnezzar, having been bred in Media (for she was the daughter of Astyages, the king of that country, as hath been before related,) had been much taken with the mountainous and woody parts of that country, and there- fore desired to have something like it at Babylon; and to gratify her herein was the reason of erecting this monstrous work of vanity. The other works attributed to him by Berosus^ and Abydenus,^ were the banks of the river, and the artificial canals, and artificial lake, which were made for draining of it in the times of the overflows: for, on the coming on of the sum- mer,' the sun melting the snow on the mountains of Armenia, from thence there is always a great overflow of Avater during the months of June, July, and August, which, running into the Euphrates, makes it overflow all its banks during that season, in the same manner as doth the River Nile in Egypt; where- by the city and country of Babylon suflering great damage, for the preventing hereof,** he did, a great way up the stream, cut out of it, on the east side, two artificial canals, thereby to drain ofl" these overflowings into the Tigris, before they should reach Babylon. The farthest of these was the current which did run into the Tigris near Seleucia," and the other that which, taking its course between the last mentioned and Babylon, discharged itself into the same river over against Apamia; which being very large, and navigable for great vessels, was from thence called Naharmalcha,'" that is, in the Chaldean language, the Royal River. This is said to have been made by Gobaris," or Gobrias, Avho, being the governor of the province, had the overseeing of the work committed to his care, and seemeth to have been the same who afterward, on a great wrong done him, revolted from the Babylonians to Cyrus, as will be hereafter related. And, for the farther securing of the country, Nebuchadnezzar bull* also prodigious banks of brick and bitumen on each side of the rivei','- to keep I Diodor. Sic. lih i. Philostratus, lib. 1. c. 18. i2 Berosus apud Joseph, lib. 10 c. 11. 3 Diodor. lib. i>. Uprodot. lib. 1. 4 Diodor. Sic. lib. 2. Strabo, lib. IG. Q. Curtius, lib. 5. c. 1 5 Apud Joseph. Aiitiq. lib. 10. c. 11. et contra Apiouem, lib. 1. 6 Apud Eusebium I'rirp. Evang. lib. 9. 7 Slrabo, Iio. Ki. Pliii. lib. 5. c. 26. Arrianiis de Expeditionc Alexandri, lib. 7. a. Cnrtiuj, lib. 5. c 1. 8 Abydenus apud Eiiseb. Pra;p. Evang. lib. 9. 9 Plol. lib. 5. c. 18. PIui. lib. 5. c. •■«. 10 Abydenus apud Euseb. Prii-p. Evang. lib. 9. Ptol. lib. 5. c. 18. Plin. lib. G. c. 2G. Polybius, lib. 5. Am. uiianus Marcellinus. lib. 21. Strabo. lib. IG. p. 747. Isidorus Characcnus de Stathmis Partbicis. II Plin. lib. 6. c. 2G. 12 Abydenus apud Euseb. Prip. Evang. lib. 9. 126 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF it within its channel, which were carried along from the head of the said canals down to the city," and some way below it. But the most wonderful part of the work was within the city itself; for there, on each side of the river,- he built from the bottom of it a great wall, for its banks, of brick and bitumen, which was of the same thickness with the walls of the city; and, over against every street that crossed the said river, he made, on each side, a brazen gate in the said wall, and stairs leading down from it to the river, from whence the citizens used to pass by boat from one side to the other, which was the only passage they had over the river, till the bridge was built, which I have above mentioned. The gates were open by day, but always shut by night. And this prodigious work was carried on,^ on both sides of the river, to the length of one hundred and sixty furlongs, which is twenty miles of our measure; and therefore must have been began two miles and a half above the city, and continued dov;n two miles and a half below it; for through the cit}"" was no more than fifteen miles. While these banks were building, the river was turned another way: for which purpose, to the w^est of Babylon,'* was made a prodigious artificial lake, which was according to the lowest computation,^ forty miles square, and one hundred 4nd sixty in compass; and in depth thirty-five feet, saith Herodotus; seventy- five, saith Megasthenes. The former seems to measure from the surface of the sides, and the other from the top of the banks that were cast up upon them. And into this lake was the whole river turned by an artificial canal cut from the west side of it, till all the said work was finished, and then it was returned again into its own former channel. But that the said river, in the time of its in- crease, might not, through the gates above mentioned, overflow the city, this lake, with the canal leading thereto, was still preserved, and proved the best and most effectual means to prevent it; for whenever the river rose to such an height, as to endanger this overflowing, it always discharged itself, by this canal, into the lake, through a passage in the bank of the river, at the head of the said ca- nal, made there of a pitch fit for this purpose, whereby it was prevented from ever rising any higher below that place. And the water received into the lake, at the time of these overflowings, was there kept all the year, as in a common reservatory, for the benefit of the country, to be let out by sluices, at aU conve- nient times, for the watering of the lands below it. So it equally served the convenience of Babylon, and also the convenience of that part of the province, in improving their lands, and making them the more fertile and beneficial to them; though at last it became the cause of great mischief to both; for it afford- ed to Cyrus the means of taking the city, and, in the effecting thereof, became the cause of drowning a great part of that country, which Avas never after reco- vered; of both which an account will be hereafter given in its proper place. Berosus, Megasthenes, and Abydenus, attribute all these works to Nebuchadnez- zar; but Herodotus teUs us, that the bridge, the river banks, and the lake, were the work of Nitocris, his dauglvter-in-law. Perhaps Nitocris finished what Ne- buchadnezzar had left unperfected at his death, and this procured her, with that historian, the honour of the whole. All the flat whereon Babylon stood being by reason of so many rivers and canals running through it, made in many places marshy, especially near the said rivers and canals, this caused it to abound much in willows; and, therefore, it is called, in scripture, the valley ofwillmos, (for so the words, Isa. xv. 7, which we translate the brook of the vnllows, ought to be rendered:) and, for the same reason, the Jews (Ps. cxxxvii. 1, 2,) are said, when they were by the rivers of Babylon, in the land of their captivity, to have hung their harps upon the wil- lows, that is, because of the abundance of them which grew by those rivers. 1 Herod lib. 1. 2 Berosus apud Joseph. Antiq. lib. 10. c. 11. 3 Diod. lib. 2. p. 90. 4 Abydenus apud Euseb. Prtpp. Evang. lib. 9. Herod. lib. 1. Diod. lib. 2. p. 96. 5 According to Herodotus, this lake was four hundred and twenty furlongs square, i. e. fifty-two miles and a half on every side, and then the whole compass must be two hundred and ten miles; but according to Me- gasthenes, the whole compass was but forty parasangse, t. e. one hundred and sixty miles, for each parasanga contained four of our miles. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 127 An. 569. JVebuchadnezzar 36.] — At the end of twelve months after Nebuchad- nezzar's last dream,' while he was walking in his palace at Babylon, most likely in his hanging-gardens, and in the uppermost terrace of them, from whence he might have a full prospect of the whole city, he proudly boasting of his great works done therein, said, " Is not this great Babylon, which I have built for the house of the kingdom, by the might of my power, and for the honour of my majesty?''^ But, while the words were yet in his mouth, there came a voice to him from heaven to rebuke his pride, which told him, that his kingdom was departed from him, and that he should be driven from the society of men, and thenceforth for seven years have his dwelling with the wild beasts of the field, there to live like them in a brutal manner. And immediately hereon, his sense.'; being taken from him, he fell into a distracted condition; and continuing so foi seven years, he lived abroad in the fields, eating grass like the oxen, and taking his lodgii>gs on the ground, in the open air, as they did, till his hair was grown like eagles' feathers, and his nails like birds' claws. \_An. 563.] — But, at the end of seven years, his understanding returning unto him, he was restored again to his kingdom, and his former majesty and honour re-established on him. And hereon, being made fully sensible of the almighty power of the God of heaven and earth, and that it is he only that doth all things according to his will, both in the armies of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth, and by his everlasting dominion disposeth of all things at his good plea- sure, he did, by a public decree, make acknowledgment hereof through all the Babylonish empire, praising his almighty power, and magnifying his mercy, in his late restoration shown upon him. An. 562. Kehuchadnezzar 43.] — After this he lived only* one year, having reigned, according to the Babylonish account, from the death of his father, forty- three years, and according to the Jewish account, from his first coming with an army into Syria, forty-five years. His death happened about the end of the year, a little before the conclusion of the thirty-seventh year of the captivity of Jehoiachin. He was one of the greatest princes that had reigned in the east for many ages before him. Megasthenes prefers him for his valour to Hercules.^ But his greatness, riches, and power, did in nothing more appear, than in his prodigious works at Babylon above described, which, for many ages after, were spoken of as the wonders of the world. He is said at his death to have prophe- cied of the coming of the Persians,'* and their bringing of the Babylonians in subjection to them. But in this he spake no more than what he had been in- formed of by Daniel the prophet, and, in the interpretation of his dreams, been assured by him should speedily come to pass, as accordingly it did within twen- ty-three years after. An. 561. Evilmerodach 1.] — On the death of this great prince, Evilmerodach his son succeeded him in the Babylonish empire;" and, as soon as he was settled in the throne, he released Jehoiachin, the king of Judah, out of prison, after he had lain there near thirty-seven years, and promoted him to great honour in his palace, admitting him to eat bread continually at his table, and placing him there before all the other kings and gieat men of his empire that came to him to Ba- bylon; and also made him a daily allowance to support him, wdth an equipage in all things else suitable hereto. Jerome tells us," from an ancient tradition of the Jews, that Evilmerodach, having had the government of the Babylonish empire during his father's distraction, administered it so ill, that, as soon as the old king came again to himself, he put him in prison for it; and that the place of his im- prisonment happening to be the same where Jehoiachin had long lain, he there entered into a particular acquaintance and friendship with him; and that this ■vas the cause of the great kindness which he afterward showed him And since 1 Dan. iv. 2 Dan. iv. HO. 3 Abycluiius apud Kii.'^fl). Prap. Evang. lib. 9. Josnph. Anliq. lib. 10. c. 11. Strabo, lib. 15. p. C87. 4 Abydeniis apud Euseb. I'rtpp. Evang. lib. 9. 52 kings XXV. 27. .Tcr. lii. :<1. Hero sus apud Joseph, contra Apionem.Iib. 1. et Euseb. Prap. Kvang. lib 9. 9 Comment, in Esaiam .\iv 19. 1^8 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the old historical traditions of the Jews are often quoted in the New Tfsiaracnt,' •if this were such, it is not wholly to be disregarded; and that especi.\!l} since the mal-administrations, which Evilmerodach was guilty of after his father's death, give reason enough to believe, that he could not govern without them be- fore. For he proved a very profligate and vicious prince," and for that reason was called Evilmerodach, that is, foolish Merodach; for his proper name was only Merodach. But, whatsoever was the inducing reason, this favour he showed to the captive prince as soon as his father was dead. So that the last year of Ne- buchadnezzar's reign was the last of the thirty-seven years of Jehoiachin's cap- tivity; and this shows us when it begun, and serves to the connecting of the chronology of the Babylonish and Jewish history in all other particulars. For which reason it may be useful to have a particular state of this matter, which I take to have been as followeth. — In the seventh year of the reign of Nebuchad- nezzar, according to the Babylonish account, in the beginning of the Jewish year,^ that is, in the month of April, according to our year, Jehoiachin was car- ried captive to Babylon. And therefore, the first year of his captivity, begin- ning in the month of April, in the seventh year of Nebuchadnezzar, the thirty- seventh year of it must begin in the same month of April, in the forty-third year of Nebuchadnezzar; toward the end whereof that great king dying, with the beginning of the next year began the first year of the reign of Evilmero- dach; and the March following, that is,^ on the twenty-seventh day of the twelfth or last month of the Jewish year, Jehoiachin was, by the great favour of the new king, released from his captivity, in the manner as is above expressed, about a month before he had fully completed thirty-seven years in it. An. 561. Evilmerodach 1.] — In the same year, which was the first of Evilme- rodach at Babylon,® Croesus succeeded Alyattis, his father, in the kingdom of Lydia, and reigned there fourteen years. This was the twenty-eighth year after the destruction of Jerusalem, and the forty-sixth of the seventy years' captivity of Judah. An. 559. JVenglissa?- 1.] — When Evilmerodach had reigned two years at Ba- bylon, his lusts, and his other wickedness, made him so intolerable, that at length even his own relations conspired against him,® and put him to death, and Nerig- lissar, his sister's husband,'' who was the head of the conspiracy against him, reigned in his stead. And since it is said, that Jehoiachin was fed by him until the day of his death,^ it is inferred from hence that he did not outlive, him, but that he either died a little before him, or else, as a favourite, was slain with him. The last seemeth most probable, as best agreeing with the prophecy of Jeremiah concerning him; for it is therein denounced against him, that he should not pros- per in his days;** which could not be so well verified of him, if he died in fuU possession of all that prosperity which Evilmerodach advanced him unto. On the death of Jehoiachin, Salathiel his son became the nominal prince of the Jews after him.'" For, after the loss of the authority, they still kept up the title; and for a great many ages after, in the parts about Babylon, there was al- ways one of the house of David, which, by the name o{ the head of the captivity, ^^ was acknoAvledged and honoured as a prince among that people, and had some sort of jurisdiction, as far as it was consistent with the government they were under, ahvays invested in him, and sometimes a ratification was obtained of it from the princes that reigned in that country. And it is said, this pageantry is still kept up among them;'- and chiefly, it seems, that they may be furnished from hence with an answer to give the Christians, when they urge the prophecy of 1 By St. Stephen, Acts vii. By St. Paul, Ilcb. xi. 3o— 37; and to Timothy 2n(l Ep. iii. 8; and bv St. Jude 9. 14, 15. 2 Berosus apud Josephum contra Apionem, lib. I. 3 2Chron. xx.\vi. 10. For tliere it is said, that it was at the return of the year. 4 2 Kings xxv. 27. Jcr. Iii. 31. 5 Herodotus, lib. 1. 6 Berosus apud Josephum contra Apionem, lib. 1. Megasthenes apud Eusebium Pr»p. Evang. lib. 9. 7 Berosus apud Josephum contra Apionem, lib. 1. Ptol. in Canone. Josephus Antiq. hb. 10. c. 12. Me- gasthenes apud Eusebium Priep Evang. lib. 9. 8 Jer. Iii. 33. 9 Ibid. xxii. 30. 10 2 Esdras v. 16. 11 Vide Notas Constantini I'Empercur ad Benj. Itinerariuin. p. 192, &c. 12 Vid. Jacobi Altingi librum Shilo, lib. 1. c. 3. 13, 14, &c. Et Seldenum de Synedriis, III. 2. c. 7. »ec. A. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 129 Jacob against them: for whensoever, from that prophecy, it is pressed upon them that the Messiah must be come, because the sceptre is now departed from Judah, and there is no more a lawgiver among them from between his feet, we are com- monly told of this head of the captivity; tl>eir usual answer being, that the sceptre is stiU preserved among them in the head of the captivity; and that they have also in their nasi,' or prince of the Sanhedrin (another pageantry officer of theirs,) a lawgiver from between the feet of Judah (that is, of his seed,) still remaining in Israel. But if these officers are now ceased from among them, as some of them win acknowledge, then this answer must cease also; and the prophecy returns in its full force upon them; and why do they then any longer resist the power of it? The same year that Evilmerodach was slain, died Astyages," king of Media, and after him succeeded Cyaxares the second, his son, in the civil government of the kingdom, and Cyrus, his grandson, by his daughter Mandana, in the mi- litary. Cyrus at this time was forty years old,^ and Cyaxares forty-one.'* And from this year those who reckon to Cyrus a reign of thirty years, begin that com- " putation. For Neriglissar, on his coming to the crown, making great prepara- tions for a war against the Medes,* Cyaxares called Cyrus out of Persia to his assistance, and on his arrival with an army of thirty thousand Persians, Cyax- ares made him general of the Medes also, and sent him with the joint forces of both nations to make war against the Babylonians. And from this time he was reckoned by all foreigners as king over both these nations; although, in reality, the regal power was solely in Cyaxares, and Cyrus was no more than general of the confederate army under him. But after his death, he succeeded him in the kingdom of the Medes, as he did his father a little before in that of Persia; which, with the countries he had conquered, made up the Persian empire, of which he was the founder and first monarch. He was a very extraordinary person in the age in which he lived, for wisdom valour, and virtue, and of a name famous in holy w^rit, not only for being the restorer of the state of Israel,** but especially in being there appointed for it by name many yeaKs before he was born;' which is an honour therein given to none, save only to him and Josiah, king of Judah.** He was born (as hath been al- ready taken notice of) in the same year in which Jehoiachin died. It is on all hands agreed, that his mother was Mandana, the daughter of Astyages, king of the Medes, and his father Cambyses, a Persian. But whether this Cambyses was king of that country, or only a private person, is not agreed. Herodotus, and those who follow him, allow him to have been no more than a private no- bleman of the family of Achfemenes, one of the most ancient in that country. But Xenophon's account makes him king of the Persians, but subject to the Medes. • And not only in this particular, but also in most things else concerning this great prince, the relations of these two historians are very much different But Herodotus's account of him, containing narratives which are much more strange and surprising, and consequently more diverting and acceptable to the reader, most have chosen rather to follow him, than Xenophon, that have written after their times of this matter. Which humour was much forwarded by Plato, in his giving a character of Xenophon's History of Cyrus^ (in which he was also followed by Tully,) as if therein,'" under the name of Cyrus, he rather drew a description of what a worthy and just prince ought to be, than gave us a true histoiy of what that prince really was. It must be acknowledged, that Xeno- phon, being a great commander, as well as a great philosopher, did graft many of hicj maxims of war and policy into that history; and to make it a vehicle foi 1 Vide Biixtorfi Lexicon Rabbinicum, p. 1399. ct Sclileiiuni do Synedriis, lib. 2. c. I!. 2 Cyropedia, lib. 1. 3 Cicero, lib 1. Do Diviiiatioiie dicit de Cyro; Ad Soptii:i{;c.simiim pervciiit cum qiiadragiiita annos natui regnare cocpisset. 4 For he was sixty-two wticn he beean to reign in liabylon, after the death of Belsliazzar, Uan. v. 31. whiM being nine years before Cyrus's death (who Uved seventy years,) it must follow that Cyrus was then sixty one; and, therefore, when ho was forty, Cyaxares must have been forty-one. 5 Cyropedia, lib. 1. fi Kzra i. 7 Isa. xliv. 28; and xlv. 1. 8 1 Kings xiii. «. 9 Qe Le^ibus, lib. 3. 10 Ep. 1. ad Quintum fratrcm. Vol. I.— 17 130 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF this, perchance was his whole design in writing that book. But it dotli not fai- low from hence, but that still the whole foundation and ground-plot of the work may all be true history. That he intended it for such is plain, and that it was so, its agreeableness with the holy writ doth abundantly verify. And the true rea- son why he chose the life of Cyrus before all others, for the purpose above men- tioned, seemeth to be no other, but that he found the true history of that excel- lent and gallant prince to be, above all others, the fittest, for those maxims of right pohcy and true princely virtue to correspond with, which he grafted upon it. And, therefore, bating the military and political reflections, the descants, discourses, and speeches, interspersed in that work, which must be acknowledged to have been all of Xenophon's addition, the remaining bare matters of fact I take to have been related, by that author, as the true history of Cyrus. And thus far I think him to have been an historian of much better credit in this mat- ter than Herodotus. For Herodotus, having travelled through Egypt, Syria, and several other countries, in order to the writing of his history, did, as travellers use to do, that is, put down all relations upon trust, as he met with them, and no doubt he was imposed on in many of them. But Xenophon was a man of another character,' who wrote all things Avith great judgment, and due conside- ration; and, having lived in the court of Cyrus the younger, a descendant of the Cyrus whom we now speak of, had opportunities of being better informed of what he wrote of this great prince, than Herodotus was; and, confining himself to this argument only, no doubt he examined all matters, relating to it, more thoroughly, and gave a more accurate and exact account of them, than could be expected from the other, who wrote of aU things, at large, as they came in his way. And, for these reasons, in aU things relating to this prince, I have chosen to follow Xenophon, rather than any of those w^ho differ from him. For the first twelve years of his life," Cyrus lived in Persia with his father, and was there educated after the Persian manner, in hardship and toil, and aU such exercises as would best tend to fit him for the fatigues of war, in which he exceeded all his contemporaries. But here it must be taken notice of, that the nane of Persia did then extend only to one province of that large country whicK hath been since so called: for then the whole nation of the Persians could numbei no more than one hundred and twenty thousand men.^ But afterward, when, by the wisdom and valour of Cyrus, they had obtained the empire of the East, the name of Persia became enlarged with their fortunes; and it thenceforth took in all that vast tract, which is extended east and west, from the River Indus to the Tigris, and north and south, from the Caspian Sea to the ocean; and so much that name comprehends even to this day. After Cyrus was twelve years old, he was sent for into Media by Astyages, his grandfather, Avith whom he continued five years: and, there, by the sweetness of his temper, his generous behaviour, and his constant endeavour to do good offices with his grandfather for all he could, he did so win the hearts of the Medes to him, and gained such an interest among them, as did afterward turn very much to his advantage, for the winning of that empire which he erected. In the sixteenth year of his age, Evilmero- dach, the son of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon and Assyria, being abroad on a hunting expedition, a little before his marriage, for a show of his bravery, made an inroad into the territories of the Medes, which drew out Astyages, with his forces, to oppose him.'* On which occasion Cyrus, accompanying his grand- father, then first entered the school of war; in which he behaved himself so well, that the victory, which was at that time gained over the Assyrians, was chiefly owing to his valour. The next year after, he went home to his father into Persia, and there continued till the fortieth year of his Ufe; at which time he was called forth to the assistance of his uncle Cyaxares, on the occasion of which I have mentioned. Hereon he marched out of Persia with his army, and 1 Diog. Laertius in Vita Xennphontis. 2 Cyropedia, lib. 1 3 Ibid. 4 From hence it may be inferred, that Evilmerodach was not the son of Nebuchadnezzar by Amyitis, the daughter of Astyages, but by some other wife, it not being likely that the grandfather and grandson wottld lAiu engage in war against each other. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 131 behaved himself so wisely, that, from this small beginning, in twenty years time ne made himself master of the greatest empire that had ever been erected in the East to that time, and established it with such wisdom, that, upon the strength of this foundation only, it stood above two hundred years, notwithstand- ing what Avas done by his successors (the worst race of men that ever governed an empire) through all that time to overthrow it. An. 558. J^eriglissar 2.] — Neriglissar, upon intelligence that Cyrus was come with so great an army to the assistance of the Medes, farther to strengthen himself against them, sent ambassadors to the Lydians,' Phrygians, Carians, Cappadocians, Cilicians, Paphlagonians, and other neighbouring nations, to call them to his aid; and, by representing to them the strength of the enemy, and the necessity of maintaining the balance of power against them, for the common good of Asia drew them all into a confederacy with him for the ensuing war. \Jln. 557.] — Whereon the king of Armenia, who had hitherto lived in subjection to the Medes, looking on them as ready to be swallowed up by so formidable a con- federacy against them, thought this a fit time for the recovering of his liberty, and therefore refused any longer to pay his tribute,* or send his quota of auxili- aries for the war, on their being required of him; which being a matter that might be of dangerous consequence to the Medes, in the example it might give to other dependent states to do the same, Cyrus thought it necessary to crush this revolt with the utmost expedition; and, therefore, marching immediately with the best of his horse, and covering his design under the pretence of a hunting match, entered Armenia,^ before there was any intelligence of his coming; and, having surprised the revolted king, took him and all his family prisoners; and, after this, having seized the hills toward Chaldea, and planted good forts and garrisons on them, for the securing of the country against the enemy on that side, he came to new terms with the captive king; and, having received from him the tribute and the auxiliaries which he demanded, he restored him again to his kingdom, and returned to the rest of his army in Media. This happenisd about the third year of the reign of Neriglissar, and the thirty-second after the destruction of Jerusalem. An. 556. JVeriglissar 4.] — After both parties had now been for three years together forming their alliances, and making their preparations for the war, in the fourth year of Neriglissar, the confederates on both sides being all drawn together, both armies took the field, and it came to a fierce battle between them;* in which Neriglissar being slain, the rest of the Assyrian army was put to the rout, and Cyrus had the victory. Croesus, king of Lydia, after the death of Neriglissar, as being in dignity next to him, took upon him the command of the vanquished army, and made as good a retreat with it as he could. But the next day following, Cyrus pursuing after them, overtook them at a disadvantage, and put them to an absolute rout, taking their camp, and dispossessing them of all their baggage; which he effected chiefly by the assistance of the Hyrcanians who had the night before revolted to him. Hereon Croesus, taking his flight out of Assyria, made the best of his way into his own country. He, being aware of what might happen, had, the night before, sent away his women, and the best of the baggage; and therefore, in this respect, escaped much better than the rest of the confederates. The death of Neriglissar was a great loss to the Babylonians; for he was a very Drave and excellent prince.* The preparations which he made for the Avar showed his wisdom, and his dying in it his valour. And there was nothing else wanting in him for his obtaining of better success in it; and, therefore, that he had it not, was owing to nothing else but that he had to deal with the pre- dominant fortune of Cyrus, whom God had designed for the empire of the East, and therefore nothing was to withstand him. But nothing made the loss of Neriglissar more appear, than the succeeding of Laborosoarchod his son in the \ Cyropedia, lib. X. 2 Ibid. lib. 3. 3 Ibid. lib. 3. 4 Ibid. lib. 3 et 4. 5 Cyropedin, lib. 4. 132 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF kingdom after him; for he Avas in every thing the reverse of his father/ being given to all manner of wickedness, cruehy, and injustice; to which, on his ad- vancement to the throne, he did let himself loose in the utmost excess, without any manner of restraint whatsoever, as if the regal office which he was now advanced to, were for nothing else but to give him a privilege of doing without control all the vile and flagitious things that he pleased. Two acts of his tyran- nical violence toAvard two of his principal nobility, Gobrias and Gadates, are par- ticularly mentioned. The only son of the former he slew at a hunting to which he had invited him, for no other reason but that he had thrown his dart with success at a wild beast when he himself had missed it; and the other he caused to be castrated, only because one of his concubines had commended him for a handsome man. These wrongs done those two noblemen drove them, with the provinces which they governed, into a revolt to Cyrus; and the whole state of the Babylonish empire suffered by it: for Cyrus encouraged hereby penetrated into the very heart of the enemy's country,^ first taking possession of the pro- vince, and garrisoning the castles of Gobrias, and afterward doing the same in the province and castles of Gadates. The Assyrian king was before him in the latter, to be revenged on Gadates for his revolt. But Cyrus on his coming having put him to the rout, and slain a great number of his men, forced him again to retreat to Babylon. After Cyrus had thus spent the summer in ravaging the whole country, and twice shown himself before the walls of Babylon to provoke the enemy to battle, at the end of the year he led back his army again toward Me- dia; and, ending the campaign with the taking of three fortresses on the frontiers, entered into winter-quarters, and sent for Cyaxares to come thither to him, that **iey might consult together about the future operations of the war. As soon as Cyrus was retreated, Laborosoarchod being now freed from the fear of the enemy, gave himself a thorough loose to all the flagitious inclinations that were predominant in him; which carried him into so many wicked and un- just actions, like those which Gobrias and Gadates had suffered from him, that, being no longer tolerable, his own people conspired against him and slew him,^ after he had reigned only nine months. He is not named in the Canon of Ptolemy; for it is the method of that Canon to ascribe all the year to him that was king in the beginning of it, how soon soever he died after, and not to reckon the reign of the successor, but from the first day of the year ensuing; and there- fore, if any king reigned in the interim, and did not live to the beginning of the next year, his name was not put into the Canon at all. And this was the case of Laborosoarchod: for Neriglissar his father being slain in battle in the begin- ning of the spring, the nine months of his son's reign ended before the next year began; and therefore, the whole of that year is reckoned to the last of Ne- riglissar, and the beginning of the next belonged to his successor: and this was the reason that he is not at all mentioned in that Canon. An. 555. Belshaz. 1.] — After him succeeded Nabonadius,'' and reigned seven- teen years. Berosus calls him Nabonnedus;^ Megasthenes, Nabonnidochus:" Herodotus, Labynetus;" and Josephus, Naboandelus,* who, he saith, is the same with Belshazzar. And there is as great a difference among writers Avhat he was, as well as what he was called. Some will have him to be of the royal blood of Nebuchadnezzar,® and others no way at all related to him.'" And some say he was a Babylonian," and others that he was of the seed of the Medes.'- And of those who allow him to have been of the royal family of Nebuchadnezzar, some will have it that he was his son, and others that he was his grandson. For the clearing of this matter, these following particulars are to be taken notice of: — First; that he is on all hands agreed to have been the last of the Babylonish kings. 1 Cyropedia, lib. 4, 5. 2 Ibid. lib. 5. 3 Berosus apiul Joscphutn contra Apiont'in, lib. 1. Megasthenes apud Euseb. Pra:p. Evaiic. lib. 9. Jose phus Antiq. lib. 10. c. 12. 4 Canon Ptolema'i. 5 Apud Josephum contra Apioneni. lib. 1. 6 Apud Euseb. Prspp. Evang. lib. 9. 7 Herodotus, lib. 1. 8 Antiq. lib. 10. c. 11. 9 Ibid. 10 Megasthenes apud Euseb. Praep. Evang. lib. 9. 11 Berosus apud Josephum contra Apioneni, lil». I 12 Scaliger in iiotis ad Fragmenta veterum GrsBcorum selecta, et de Emendatione Temporum, lib. G. eap^ De Eegibus Babyloniis. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 133 Secondly, That therefore he must have been the same who in scripture is called Belshazzar: for, immediately after the death of Belshazzar, the kingdom was given to the Modes and Persians. (Dan. v. 28. 30, 31.) Thirdly, That he was of the seed of Nebuchadnezzar; for he is called his son, and Nebuchadnezzar is said to be his father in several places of the same fifth chapter of Daniel; and, in the second book of Clironicles (chap, xxxvi. 20,) it is said that Nebu- chadnezzar and his children, or offspring, reigned at Babylon till the kingdom of Persia. Fourthly, That the nations of the east were to serve Nebuchadnez- zar, and his son, and his son's son, according to the prophecy of Jeremiah (chap, xxvii. 7;) and therefore, he must have had a son, an4 a son's son, suc- cessors to him in the throne of Babylon. Fifthly, That as Evilmerodach was his son, so none but Belshazzar, of all the kings that reigned after him at Baby- lon, could be his son's son; for Neriglissar was only his daughter's husband, and Laborosoarchod was the son of Neriglissar; and therefore, neither of them was either son or son's son to Nebuchadnezzar. Sixthly, That this last king of Ba- bylon is said by Herodotus' to be son to the great queen Nitocris; and therefore she must have been the wife of a king of Babylon to make her so; and he could have been none other than Evilmerodach: for by that king of Babylon only could she have a son, that was son's son to Nebuchadnezzar. And therefore, putting all this together, it appears that this Nabonadius, the last king of Baby- Ion, was the same with him that in scripture is called Belshazzar; and that he was the son of Evilmerodach, by Nitocris his queen, and so son's son to Nebu< chadnezzar. And that whereas he is called the son of Nebuchadnezzar in the fifth chapter of Daniel, and Nebuchadnezzar is there called his father; this is t9 be understood in the large sense, wherein any ancestor upward is often called father, and any descendant downward son, according to the usual style of scripture. This new king came young to the crown; and had he been wholly left to himself, the Babylonians would have gotten but little by the change: for he hath ii\ Xenophon the character of an impious prince;- and it sufficiently appears, by what is said of him in Daniel, that he w^as so. But his mother, who was a woman of great understanding and a masculine spirit,^ came in to their relief: for, while her son followed his pleasures, she took the main burden of the go- vernment upon her, and did all that could be done by human wisdom to pre serve it. But God's appointed time for its fall approaching, it was beyond th power of any wisdom to prevent it. On the coming of Cyaxares to Cyrus's camp, and consultation thereon ha« between them concerning the future carrying on of the war,"" it was found that by ravaging and plundering the countries of the Babylonish empire they did not at all enlarge their own; and therefore it was resolved to alter the method of the war for the future, and to apply themselves to the besieging of the for- tresses, and the taking of their towns, that so they might make themselves mas- ters of the country; and in this sort of war they employed themselves for the next seven years. In the mean time Nitocris* did all that she could to fortify the country against tliem, and especially the city of Babylon; and therefore did set herself diligently to perfect all the works that Nebuchadnezzar had left unfinished there, especially the walls of the city, and the banks of the river within it. By this last she fortified the city as much against the river by walls and gates as it was against the land; and had it been in both places equally guarded, it could never have been taken. And moreover, while the river was turned for the finishing of these banks and walls, she caused a wonderful vault or gallery to be made under *Jie river," leading across it from the old palace to the new, twelve feet high, and fifteen feet wide; and having covered it over with a strong arch, and over that with a layer of bitumen six feet thick, she turned the river again over it; for it is 1 Herodotus, lib. 1. 2 Cyropedia, lib. 7. 3 Dorodotus, lib. 1. 4 Cyropfldia, lib. 6 S Herodotus, lib. 1. 6 Herodotus, lib. 1. Diod. Sic. lib. 2. Philostratus, lib. 1. c. 1& 134 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the nature of that bitumen to petrify when water comes ove]- it, and giow as hard as stone; and thereby the vault or gallery under was preserved from having any of the water of the river to pierce through into it. The use thi^s was intended for, was to preserve a communication between the two palaces, whereof one stood on one side of the river, and the other on the other side, that in case one of them were distressed (for they were both fortresses strongly fortified,) it might be relieved from the other; or, in case either were taken, there might be a way to retreat from it to the other. But all these cautions and provisions served in no stead when the city was taken by surprise; because in that hurry and confusion, which men were then in, none of them were made use of. An. 555. Belshaz, 1.] — In the first year of this king's reign, which was the thirty-fourth after the destruction of Jerusalem, Daniel had revealed unto him the vision of the four monarchies, and of the kingdom of the Messiah that was to succeed after them; which is at full related in the seventh chapter of Daniel. An. 553. Belshaz. 3.] — In the third year of king Belshazzar, Daniel saw the vision of the ram and the he-goat, whereby were signified the overthrow of the Persian empire by Alexander the Great, and the persecution that was to be raised against the Jews by Antiochus Epiphanes, king of Syria. This vision is at full related in the eighth chapter of Daniel; and it is there said, that it was revealed unto him at Shushan, in the palace of the king of Babylon, while he attended there as a counsellor and minister of state about the king's business; which shows that Shushan, with the province of Elam, of which it was the metropoHs, was then in the hands of the Babylonians. But, about three years after, Abra- dates, viceroy or prince of Shushan, revolting to Cyrus, it was thenceforth joined to the empire of the Medes and Persians; and the Elamites came up with the Medes to besiege Babylon, according to the prophecy of Isaiah (chap. xxi. 2;) and Elam was again restored, according to the prophecy of Jeremiah (chap. xlix. 39;) for it recovered its liberty again under the Persians, which it had been deprived of under the Babylonians. An. 551. Belshaz. 5.] — The Medes and Persians growing still upon the Baby- lonians, and Cyrus making great progress in his conquests, by taking fortresses, towns, and provinces, from them, to put a stop to this prevaihng power,' the icing of Babylon, about the fifth year of his reign, taking a great part of his treasure with him, goes into Lydi^, to king Croesus his confederate, and there, by his assistance, framed a very formidable confederacy against the Medes and Persians; and with his money hiring a very numerous army of Egyptians, Greeks, Thracians, and all the nations of Lesser Asia, he appointed Croesus to be their general, and sent him with them to invade Media, and then returned again to Babylon. An. 548. Belshaz. 8.] — Cyrus having full intelligence of all these proceedings from one of his confidants, who by his order, under the pretence of a deserter, had gone over to the enemy, made suitable preparations to withstand the storm, and when all was ready, marched against the enemy. By this time Croesus had passed over the River Halys,^ taken the city of Pteria, and in a manner destroyed all the country thereabout. But before he could pass anj^ farther Cyrus came up with him, and having engaged him in battle, put aU his nume- rous army to flight; whereon Croesus returning to Sardis, the chief city of his kingdom, dismissed all his auxiliaries to their respective homes, ordering them to be again with him by the beginning of the ensuing spring, and sent to all his alhes for the raising of more forces, to be ready against the same time, for the carrying on the next year's war; not thinking that in the interim, now winter being approaching, he should have any need of them. But Cyrus pursuing the advantage of his victoiy, followed close after him into Lydia, and there came upon him just as he had dismissed his auxiliaries. However, Croesus getting to- gether all his own forces, stood battle against him. But the Lydians being mostly horse, Cyrus brought his camels against them, whose smeU the horses not being 1 Cyropedia. lib. 6. 2 Herodotus, lib. 1. Cyropedia, lib. C. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 135 ble to bear, they were all put into disorder by it; whereon the Lydians dis- mounting, fought on foot; but being soon overpowered, were forced to make their retreat ^ Sardis, where Cyrus immediately shut them up in a close siege. While he lay there, he celebrated the funeral of Abradates and Panthea his wife.' He was prince of Shushan under the Babylonians, and had revolted to Cyrus about two years before, as hath been already mentioned. His wife, a very beautiful woman, had been taken prisoner by Cyrus in his first battle against the Babylonians.- Cyrus having treated her kindly, and kej^t her chastely for her husband, the sense of this generosity drew over this prince to him;^ and he happening to be slain in this war, as he was fighting valiantly in his service, his wife, out of grief for his death, slew herself upon his dead body, and Cyrus took care to have them both honourably buried together, and a stately monument was erected over them near the River Pactolus, where it remained many ages after. Croesus being shut up in Sardis sent to all his allies for succours;' but Cyrus pressed the siege so vigorously, that he took the city before any of them could arrive to its relief, and Cicesus in it, whom he condemned to be burned to death; and accordingly a great pile of wood was laid together, and he was placed on the top of it for the execution; in which extremity, calling to mind the confer- ence he formerly had with Solon, he cried out with a great sigh three times, "Solon, Solon, Solon." This Solon was a wise Athenian,* and the greatest phi- losopher of his time, who coming to Sardis on some occasion, Croesus, out of the vanity and pride of his mind, caused all his riches, treasures, and stores, to be shown unto him, expecting that, on his having seen them, he should have ap- plauded his felicity, and pronounced him of all men the most happy herein; but, on his discourse with him, Solon plainly told him, that he could pronounce no man happy as long as he lived, because no one could foresee what might happen unto him before his death. Of the truth of which Crcesus being thoroughly con- vinced by his present calamity, this made him call upon the name of Solon; whereon Cyrus, sending to know what he meant by it, had the whole story re- lated to him; which excited in him such a sense of the uncertainty of all human felicity, and such a compassion for Crcesus, that he caused him to be taken down from the pile, just as tire had been put to it; and not only spared his life, but allowed him a very honourable subsistence, and made use of him as one of his chief counsellors all his life after; and, at his death, recommended him to his son Cambyses, as the person whose advice he would have him chiefly to follow. The taking of this city happened in the first year of the fifty-eighth Olympiad,* which was the eighth year of Belshazzar, and the forty -first after the destruction of Jerusalem. Croesus being a very religious prince, according to the idolatrous superstition of those times, entered not on this war without having first consulted all his gods' and taken their advice about it; and he had two oracular answers given him from them, which chiefly conduced to lead him into this unfortunate under- taking, that cost him the loss of his kingdom. The one of them was, that Croe- sus should then only think himself in danger, when a mule should reign over the Medes;* and the other, that when he should pass over Halys, to make war upon the Medes, he should overthrow a great empire. The first, from the im- possibility of the thing, that ever a mule should be a king, made him argue that he was forever safe. The second made him believe, that the empire that he should overthrow, on his passing over the River Halys, should be the empire of the Medes. And this chiefly encouraged him in this expedition, contrary to the advice of one of the wisest of his friends, who earnestly dissuaded him from it. But now all things having happened otherwise than these oracles had made 1 Cyropcdia, nil. 7. 2 Ibiil. lib. 5. :i Ibid. lili. 6. 4 Herodotus, lib. 1. Cyropodia, lib. 7. 5 I'iutaiclius in Vita Solonis. Herodotus, lib. 1. 6 Solinue, cap. 7. Eusebiiis in ("lironico. 7 IVrodotiis, lib. 1. Cyropedia, lib. 7. 8 Nebuchadnezzar prophesied of the coming of Cyrus under the same appellation, telling the Babylonians, at ihe lime of his dea'h, that a Persian mule should come and reduce them into servitude. So sailn Megia- thencs in Eusebius de Pra;p. Evang. lib. 9. 136 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF him expect, he obtained leave of Cyrus to send messengers to the temples of those gods who had thus misled him, to expostulate with them about it. The answers which he had hereto were, that Cyrus was the mule legended by the oracle; for that he was born of two different kinds of people, of the Persians by his father, and of the Medes by his mother, and was of the more noble kind by his mother. And the empire which he was to overthrow, by his passing over (ho Halys, was his own. By such false and fallacious oracles did those evil spirits, from whom they proceeded, delude mankind in those days; rendering thL'U- answers, when consulted, in such dubious and ambiguous terms, that what- soever the event were, they might admit of an interpretation to agree with it. An. 540. Belshaz. 16.] — After this Cyrus continued some time in Lesser Asia,* till he had brought all the several nations which inhabited it, from the Egean Sea to the Euphrates, into thorough subjection to him. From hence he went into Syria and Arabia, and there did the same thing, and then marched into the upper countries of Asia; and, having there also settled all things in a thorough obedience under his dominion, he again entered Assyria, and marched on to- ward Babylon, that being the only place in all the east which now held out against him: and, having overthrown Belshazzar in battle, he shut him up in Babylon, and there besieged him. This happened in the ninth year after the taking of Sardis, and in the beginning of the sixteenth year of Belshazzar. But this siege proved a very difficult work: for the walls were high and impregna- ble, the number of men within to defend them very great, and they were fully furnished with all sorts of provisions for twenty years, and the void ground with- in the waUs was able both by tillage and pasturage to furnish them with much more.^ And therefore the inhabitants, thinking themselves secure in their walls and their stores, looked on the taking of the city by a siege as an impracticable thing; and therefore, from the top of their walls, scoffed at Cyrus, and derided him for every thing he did toward it. However, he went on with the attempt; and first he drew a line of circumvallation round the city, making the ditch broad and deep, and by the help of palm trees, which usually grow in that coun- try to the height of one hundred feet,^ he erected towers higher than the walls, thinking at first to have been able to take the place by assault; but finding little success this way, he applied himself wholly to the starving of it into a surren- der, reckoning that the more people there were within, the sooner the work would be done. But, that he might not over fatigue his army, by detaining them all at this work, he divided all the forces of the empire into twelve parts, and appointed each its month to guard the trenches. An. 539. Belshaz. 17.] — But, after near two years had been wasted this way, and nothing effected, he at length lighted on a stratagem, which, with little difficulty, made him master of the place; for understanding* that a great annual festival Avas to be kept at Babylon on a day approaching, and that it was usual for the Babylonians on that solemnity to spend the whole night in revelling, drunkenness, and all manner of disorders, he thought this a proper time to sur- prise them; and, for the effecting of it, he had this device: he sent up a party of his men to the head of the canal leading to the great lake above described, with orders, at a time set, to break down the great bank or dam, which was be- tween the river and that canal, and to turn the whole current that way into the lake. In the interim, getting all his forces together, he posted one part of them at the place where the river ran into the city, and the other where it came out, with orders to enter the city that night by the channel of the river, as soon as they should find it fordable. And then, toward the evening, he opened the head of the trenches on both sides the river above the city, to let the water of it run into them. And, by this means, and the opening of the great dam, the river was so drained, that, by the middle of the night, it being then in a manner empty, both parties, according to their orders, entered the channel, the one hav- 1 iletodotus, lib. I. Cyropcdia, lib. 7. 2 Vide Q. Curtium, lib.5, c. 1. 3 Cyropedia lib. 7. * Herodotus, lib. 1. Cyropedia, lib. 7. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 137 ing Gobrias, and the other Gadates, for their guides; and, finding the gates lead- ing down to the river, which used on all other nights to be shut, then all left open, througl\ the neglect and disorder of that time of looseness, they ascended through them into the city; and both parties being met at the palace, as had been concerted between them, they there surprised the guards, and slew them all: and when, on the noise, some that were within opened the gates to know what it meant, they rushed in upon them, and took the place; where, finding the king, with his sword drawn, at the head of those who were at hand to assist him, they slew him, valiantly fighting for his life, and all those that were with him. After this, proclamation being made, of life and safety to all such as should bring in their arms, and of death to all that should refuse so to do, all quietly yielded to the conquerors, and Cyrus, without any farther resistance, became master of the place: and this concluded all his conquests, after a war of twenty-one years; for so long was it from his coming out of Persia with his army, for the assistance of Cyaxares, to his taking of Babylon; during all which time, he lay abroad in the field, carrying on his conquests from place to place, till, at length, he had sub- dued all the east, from the Egean Sea to the River Indus, and thereby erected the greatest empire that had ever been in Asia to that time; which work was owing as much to his wisdom as his valour, for he equally excelled in both. And he was also a person of that great candour and humanity to all men, that he made greater conquests by his courtesy, and his kind treatment of all he had to do with, than by his sword, whereby he did knit the hearts of all men to him; and, in this foundation, lay the greatest strength of his empire, when he firsi erected it. This account Herodotus and Xenophon both give of the taking of Babylon by Cyrus; and herein they exactly agree with the scripture. For Daniel tells us,' that Belshazzar made a great feast for a thousand of his lords, and for his wives, and for his concubines, and that in that very night he M^as slain, and Da- rius the Mede, that is, Cyaxares, the uncle of Cyrus, took the kingdom; for Cy- rus allowed him the title of all his conquests as long as he lived. In this feast Belshazzar having impiously profaned the gold and silver vessels that were taken out of the temple of Jerusalem, in causing them to be brought into the banquet- ing-house, and there drinking out of them, he, and his lords, and his wives, and his concubines, God did, in a very extraordinary and wonderful manner, express his wrath against him for the wickedness hereof; for he caused a hand to appear on the wall, and there write a sentence of immediate destruction against him for it. The king saw the appearance of the hand that wrote it; for it was ex- actly over against the place where he sat. And, therefore, being exceedingly affrighted and troubled at it, he commanded all his wise men, magicians, and astrologers, to be immediately called for, that they might read the writing, and make known unto him the meaning of it. But none of them being able to do it,° the queen-mother, on her hearing of this wonderful thing, came into the ban- queting-house, and acquainted the king of the great skill and ability of Daniel in such matters; whereon, he beino; sent for, did read to the king; the writing, and boldly telling him of his many iniquities and transgressions against the great God of heaven and earth, and particularly in profaning at that banquet the holy vessels which had been consecrated to his service in his temple at Jerusalem, made him understand, that this hand-writing was a sentence from heaven against him for it, the inteqiretation of it being, that his kingdom was taken from him, and given to the Medes and Persians. And it seemeth to have been immedi- ately upon it that the ])alace was taken, and Belshazzar slain; for candles were lighted before the hand-writing appeared:^ some time after this must be required for the calling of the wise men, the magicians, and astrologers, and some time must be wasted in their trying in vain to read the writing. After that, the qucen- 1 Daniel v. 2 The reason why they could not read it was, because it was written ill the old Hebrew letters, now called the Samaritan character, wlltli the Babylonians knew nothing of. 3 Dan. v. 5. Vol. I.— 18 138 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF mother came from her apartment into the banqueting-house to direct tlie king to send for Daniel, and then he was called for, perchance from some distant place. And by this time many hours of the night must have been spent; and therefore we may well suppose, that, by the time Daniel had intei-preted the writing, the Persians were got within the palace, and immediately executed the contents of it, by slaying Belshazzar, and all his lords that were with him. The queen, that entered the banqueting-house to direct the king to call for Daniel, could not be his wife; for all his wives and concubines, the text tells us, sat with him at the feast; and therefore, it must have been Nitocris, the queen-mother. And she seemeth to have been there called the queen, by Avay of eminency, because she had the regency of the the kingdom under her son, which her great wisdom eminently qualified her for. And Belshazzar seemeth to have left this entirely to her management: for when Daniel was called in before him, he did not know him,' though he was one of the chief ministers of state that did the king's business in his palace,^ but asked of him whether he were Daniel. But Nitocris, who constantly employed him in the public affairs of the kingdom, knew him well, and therefore advised that he should be sent for on this occa- sion. This shows Belshazzar to have been a prince that wholly minded his plea- sures, leaving all things else to others to be managed for him; which is a con- duct too often followed by such princes, who think kingdoms made for nothing else but to serve their pleasures, and gratify their lusts. And therefore that he held the crown seventeen years, and against so potent an enemy as Cyrus, was wholly owing to the conduct of his mother, into whose hands the management of his affairs fell: for she was a lady of the greatest wisdom of her time, and did the utmost that could be done to save the state of Babylon from ruin. And therefore her name was long after of that fame in those parts, that Herodotus speaks of her as if she had been sovereign of the kingdom, in the same man- ner as Semiramis is said to have been, and attributes to her all those works about Babylon which other authors ascribe to her son." For, although they were done in his reign, it was she that did them, and therefore she had the best title to the honour that was due for them; though, as hath been above hinted, the great lake, and the canal leading to it (which though reckoned among the works of Nebuchadnezzar, must at least have been finished by her, according to Hero- dotus,) how wisely soever they were contrived for the benefit both of the city and country, turned to the great damage of both; for Cyrus draining the rivei by this lake and canal, by that means took the city. And when, by the break ing down of the banks at the head of the canal, the river was turned that way, no care being taken afterward again to reduce it to its former channel, by re- pairing the breach, all the country on that side was overflown and drowned by it;'* and the current, by long running this way, at length making the breach so wide, as to become irreparable, unless by an expense as great as that whereby the bank was first built, a whole province was lost by it; and the current which went to Babylon afterward grew so shallow as to be scarce fit for the smallest navigation, which was a farther damage to that place. Alexander, who intended to have made Babylon the seat of his empire, endeavoured to remedy this mis- chief, and did accordingly set himself to build the bank anew, which was on the west side of it; but when he had carried it on the length of four miles, he was stopped by some difficulties that he met with from the nature of the soil, which possibly would have been overcome, had he lived; but his death, Avhich hap- pened a little after, put an end to this, as well as to all his other designs. And, a while after, Babylon falling into decay, on the building of Seleucia in the neigh- bourhood, this work was never more thought of; but that country hath remained all bog and marsh ever since. And no doubt this was one main reason which helped forward the desertion of that place, especially when they found a new city built in the neighbourhood, in a much better situation. 1 Dan. V. 13. 2 Ibib. viii. 27. 3 Berosus apud Josepbum contra Apionem, lib. 1. 4 Arriannua de Expeditione Alexandri, lib. 7. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 139 In the taking of Babylon ended the Babylonish empire, after it had conti- aued from the beginning of the reign of Nabonassar (who first founded it) two hundred and nine years. And here ended the power and pride of this great city, just fifty years after it had destroyed the city and temple of Jerusalem; and hereby were in a great measure accomplished the many prophecies which were by the prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Habakkuk, and Daniel, delivered against it. And here it is to be observed, that, in reference to the present besieging and taking of the place, it was particularly foretold by them, that it should be shut up,' and besieged by the Medes, Elamites, and Armenians; that th6 river should be dried up;^ that the city should be taken in the time of a feast,^ while her princes and her wise men, her captains and her rulers, and her mighty men, were-drunken; and that they should be thereon made to sleep a perpe- tual sleep, from which they should not awake. And so accordingly all this came to pass, Belshazzar, and aU his thousand princes, who were drunk with him at the feast, having been all slain by Cyrus's soldiers when they took the palace.'* And so also was it particularly foretold, by the prophet Isaiah (xiv,) that God would make the country of Babylon " a possession for the bittern, and pools of water" (ver. 23,) which was accordingly fulfilled by the overflowing and drowning of it, on the breaking down of the great dam, in order to take the city; which I have above given an account of; and so also that God would cut off from that city the son and the grandson (ver. 2-2,) that is, the son and grandson of their great king Nebuchadnezzar; and they were accordingly both cut off by violent deaths in the flower of their age, Evilmerodach the son be- fore this time in the manner as hath been above related, and Belshazzar the grandson in the present taking of Babylon; and hereby the sceptre of Babylon was broken, as was foretold by the same prophecy (ver. 5,) for it did never after any more bear rule. Where I read the son and the grandson (ver. 22,) it is, I confess, in the English translation, the son and the nephew. But, in the twenty-first chapter of Genesis (ver. 23,) the same Hebrew word neked is trans- lated son's son, and so it ought to have been translated here; for this is the pro- per signification of the word, which appears from the use of the same word, Job xviii. 19. For Bildad, there speaking of the wicked, and the curse of God which shall be upon him, in the want of a posterity, expresseth it thus: Lo nin lo veto neked, i. e. he sJmll have neither son nor graridson. For nephew, in the English signification of the word, whether brother's son or sister's son, cannot be within the meaning of the text, the context not admitting it. An. 538. Darius iixe Mcde 1.] — After the death of Belshazzar, Darius the Mede is said in scripture to have taken the kingdom:^ for C3'rus, as long as his uncle lived, allowed him a joint title with him in the empire, although it Avas all gained by his own valour, and out of deference to him yielded him the first place of honour in it. But the whole power of the army, and the chief con- duct of all affairs being stiU in his hands, he only was looked on as the supreme governor of the empire, which he had erected; and therefore there is no notice at all taken of Darius in the Canon of Ptolemy, but immediately after the death of Belshazzar (who is there called Nabonadius) Cyrus is placed as the next successor, as in truth and reality he Avas; the other having no more than the name and the shadow of the sovereignty, excepting only in Media, which was his own proper dominion. There are some who will have Darius the Median to have been Nabonadius," the last Babylonish king in the Canon of Ptolemy. And their scheme is, that, after the death of Evilmerodach, NerigUssar succeeded only as guardian to La- borosoarchod his son, who was next heir in right of his mother, she having been daughter to Nebuchadnezzar: and Laborosoarchod was the Belshazzar of tin scriptures, who was slain in the night of the impious festival, not by Cyrus ;say they,) but by a conspiracy of his own people; that the scriptures attribute to hire 1 Isa. xiii. 17. x.\i. 2 Jer. li. 11. 27—30. 2 Jer. I. 38. li. 36. 3 Ihid. li. 3i). 57. 4 Cyropedia, lib. 7. 5 Dan. v. 31. C Scaliger.Calvisius. and others. 140 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the whole four years of Belshazzar, which the Canon of Ptolemy doth to Ne- righssar (or Nericassolassar, as he is there called,) because Neriglissar reigned only as guardian for him; and that hence it is, that we hear of the first and the third year of Belshazzar,' in Daniel, though Laborosoarchod reigned alone, after his father's death, only nine months; that, after his death, the Babylonians made choice of Nabonadius, who was no way of kin to the family of Nebu- chadnezzar, but a Median by descent; and that for this reason only is he called Dnvius the Median in scripture. As to what they say of Nabonadius not being 01 kirf to the family of Nebuchadnezzar, it must be confessed, that the fragments of Megasthenes^ may give them some authority for it; but as for all the rest, it liath no other foundation but the imagination of them that say it. And the whole is contrary to scripture; for, 1st, The hand- writing on the wall told Bel- shazzar, that his kingdom should be divided, or rent from him, and be given to the JV^edes and Persians;^ and immediately after the sacred text tells us,"* that Belshazzar was slain that night, and Darius the Median took the kingdom, who could be none other than Cyaxares, king of Media, who, in conjunction with Cyrus the Persian, conquered Babylon. 2dly, Therefore Belshazzar must have been the last Babylonish king, and consequently, the Nabonadius of Ptolemy. 3dly, This last king w^as not a stranger to the family of Nebuchadnezzar; for the sacred text makes him his descendant.** 4thly, Darius is said to have governed the kingdom by the laws of the Medes and Persians;** which cannot be supposed, till after the Medes and Persians had conquered that kingdom. Had this Darius been Nabonadius the Babylonish king, he would certainly have governed by the Babylonish laws, and not by the laws of his enemies, the Medes and the Per- sians, who were in hostility against him all his reign, and sought his ruin. 5thly, Darius is said to have divided his empire into one hundred and twenty provinces,' which could not have been true of the Babylonish empire, that never having been large enough for it. But it must be understood of the Per- sian empire only, which was vastly larger. And afterward, on the conquest of Egypt by Cambyses, and of Thrace and India by Darius Hystaspis, it had seven other provinces added to its former number; and therefore, in the time of Esther, it consisted of one hundred and twenty-seven provinces. And this hav- ing been the division of the Persian empire at that time, it sufficiently prove? the former to have been of the same empire also: for if the Persian empire fron India to Ethiopia contained but one hundred and twenty-seven provinces, tht empire of Babylon alone, which was not the seventh part of the other, could nol contain one hundred and twenty. The testimony which Scaliger brings to prove Nabonadius to have been a Mede by descent, and by election made king of Babylon, is very absurd. In the prophecy of Nebuchadnezzar, delivered to the Babylonians a little before his death, concerning their future subjection to the Persians, which is preserved in the fragments of Megasthenes, there are these words:® — "A Persian mule shall come, who, by the help of your own gods fighting for him, shall bring slavery upon you, whose assistant, or fellow-causer herein, shall be the Mede." By Avhich Mede is plainly meant Cyaxares, king of Media, who was confederate with Cyrus in the war, wherein Babylon was con- quered. But Scaliger saith it was Nabonadius; and hence proves that he was a Mede, and quotes this place in Megasthenes for it. If you ask him, why he saith this, his answer is, that the person who is in that prophecy said to be the assistant of Cyrus, and fellow-causer with him in bringing servitude upon Baby- lon, must be Nabonadius, because he was an assistant and fellow-causer with him herein, in being beaten and conquered by him. This argument needs no an- swer, it is sufficiently refuted by being related. And therefore, Isaac Vossius well observes, that the arguments which Scaliger brings for this are indigna Sca- ligero, i. e. unworihy of Scalige?: — Chronologia Sacra, p. 144. 1 Dan, vii. 1. viii. 1. 2 Apud Euseb. Prap. Evang. lib. 9. 3 Dan. v. 28. 4 Ibid. v. 30, 31, 5 Dan. v. 11. 13. 18. 22. C Ibid. vi. 8—15. 7 Ibid. vi. 1. 8 Apud Euseb. Prtep. Evang. lib. 9. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 141 After Cyrus had settled his affairs at Babylon,' he went into Persia, to make a visit to his father and mother, they being both yet Uving; and, on lis return through Media, he there married the daughter of Cyaxares, having vith her for dowry the kingdom of Media, in reversion after her father's death; for she was his only child; and then with his new wife he went back to Babylon. And Cyaxares, being earnestly invited by him thither, accompanied him m the jour- ney. On their arrival at Babylon, they there took counsel, in concert together, for the settling of the whole empire; and, having divided it into one hundred and twenty provinces, which I have before spoken of," they distributed the go- vernment of them among those that had borne with Cyrus the chief burden of the war,'^ and best merited from him in it. Over these were appointed three presidents,'* who, constantly residing at court, were to receive from them, from time to time, an account of all particulars relating to their respective govern- ment, and again remit to them the king's orders concerning them. And there- fore, in these three, as the chief ministers of the king, was intrusted with the superintendency and main government of the whole empire: and of them Da- niel was made the first. To which preference, not only his great wisdom (which was of eminent fame all over the east,) but also his seniority, and long experi- ence in affairs, gave him the justest title: for he had now, from the second yeai of Nebuchadnezzar, been employed full sixty-five years as a prime minister of state under the kings of Babylon. However, this station advancing him to be the next person to the king in the whole empire, it stirred up so great an envy against him among the other courtiers, that they laid that snare for him, which cast him into the lions' den. But he being there delivered by a miracle from all harm, this malicious contrivance ended in the destruction of its authors; and Daniel being thenceforth immoveably settled in the favour of Darius and Cyrus,* he prospered greatly in their time, as long as he lived. • In the first year of Darius, Daniel computing that the seventy years of Judah's captivity, which were prophesied of by the prophet Jeremiah, were now draw- ing to an end, earnestly prayed unto God*^ that he would remember his people, and grant restoration to Jerusalem, and make his face again to shine upon the holy city, and his sanctuary which he had placed there. Whereon, in a vision, he had assurance given him by the angel Gabriel, not only of the deliverance of Judah from their temporal captivity under the Babylonians, but also of a much greater redemption, which God would give his church in his deliverance of them from their spiritual captivity under sin and Satan, to be accomplished at the end of seventy weeks, after the going forth of the commandment to rebuild Jerusa- lem, that is, at the end of four hundred and ninety years. For, taking each day for a year, according as is usual in the prophetic style of scripture, so many years seventy weeks of years will amount to, which is the clearest prophecy of the coming of the Messiah that we have in the Old Testament; for it determines it to the very time, on which he accordingly came, and by his death and pas- sion, ana resurrection from the dead, completed for us the great work of our salvation C^rus, immediately on his return to Babylon, had issued out his orders for all his forces to come thither to him^, which, at a general muster, he found to be one hundred and twenty thousand horse, two thousand scythed chariots, and six nundred thousand foot. Of these having distributed into garrisons as many as were necessary for the defence of the several parts of the empire, he marched with the rest in an expedition into Syria, where he settled all those parts of the empire; reducing all under him as far as the Red Sea, and the confines of Ethi- opia. In the interim, Cyaxares (whom the Scriptures call Darius the INIedian) stayed at Babylon,* and there governed the affairs of the empire; and during that time happened what hath been above related concerning Daniel's being cast into the lion's den, and his miraculous deliverance from it. ICyropedia. lib. 8. 2 Dan. vi. I. 3 Cyropedia, lib. 8. 4Dan. yi.2. SIbid. vi. 28. 6 Rid. ix. 7 Cyropedia, lib. 8. 8 Dan. ▼. 3i. 142 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF And about the same time seem to have been coined tliose famous pieces of gold called Darics, which/ by reason of their fineness, were for several ages pre- ferred before all other coin throughout all the east; for we are told that the au- thor of this coin was not Darius Hystaspis," as some have imagined, but aa an- cienter Darius. But there is no ancienter Darius mentioned to have reigned in the east, excepting only this Darius, whom the scripture calls Darius the Median. And therefore it is most Ukely that he was the author of this coin, and that, during the two years that he reigned at Babylon, while Cyrus was absent from thence on his Syrian, Egyptian, and other expeditions, he caused it to be made there out of the vast quantity of gold which had been brought thither into the treasury, as the spoils of the war which he and Cyrus had been so long engaged in; from whence it became dispersed all over the east, and also into Greece, where it was of great reputation. According to Dr. Bernard,^ it weighed two grains more than one of our guineas; but the fineness added much more to its value; for it was in a manner all of pure gold, having none, or at least very lit- tle alloy in it; and therefore may be well reckoned as the proportion of gold and silver now stands with us, in respect to each other, to be worth twenty-five shil- lings of our money. In those parts of scripture which were written after the Babylonish captivity,* these pieces are mentioned by the name of Adarkonim,* and in the Talmudists by the name of Darkonoth, both from the Greek Aaps.xoi, i. e. Darics. And, it is to be observed, that all those pieces of gold, which were afterward coined of the same Aveight and value by the succeeding kings, not only of the Persians but also of the Macedonian race, w^ere all called Darics, from the Darius that was the first author of them. And these were either whole Darics or half Darics, as with us there are guineas and half guineas. But, about two years after, Cyaxares dying, and Cambyses being also dead in Persia,^ "Cyrus returned, and took on him the whole government of the empire; over which he reigned seven years. His reign is reckoned, from his first coming out of Persia, with an army for the assistance of Cyaxares, to his death, to have been thirty years, from the taking of Babylon nine years, and from liis being sole monarch of the whole empire after the death of Cyaxares and Cambyses seven years. TuUy^ reckons by the first account, Ptolemy^ by the second, and Xenophon" by the third. And the first of these seven years, is that first year of Cyrus mentioned in the first verse of the book of Ezra, wherein an end was put to the captivity of Judah, and a licence given them, by a pubhc decree of the king's, again to return into their own country. The seventy years, which Jeremiah had prophesied should be the continuance of this captivity, were now just expired: for it began a year and two months before the death of Nabopol- lassar, after that Nebuchadnezzar reigned forty-three years, Evilmerodach two years, Neriglissar four years, Belshazzar seventeen years, and Darius the Median iwo years; which being all put together, make just sixty-nine years and two months; and if you add hereto ten months more to complete the said seventy years, it will carry down the end of them exactly into the same month, in the first year of Cyrus, in which it began in the last save one of Nabopollassar, i. e. in the ninth month of the Jewish year, which is the November of ours. For in that month Nebuchadnezzar first took Jerusalem, and carried great nurnbers of the people into captivity, as hath been before related. And that their release from it happened also in the same month, may be thus inferred from scripture. The first time the Jews are found at Jerusalem after their return, was in theii Nisan, i. e. in our April, as will hereafter be shown. If you allow them foui months for their march thither from Babylon (which was the time in which Ezra performed the Uke march,'") the beginning of that march will fall in the middle 1 Herodotus, lib. 4. IMutarchus in Artaxcrxe. 2 Harpocralinii. Sclwliastcs Aristophanis ad Ecclcs. p. 741, 742. Suidas sub voce AKffxos. 3 De Ponderibtis et Mensiiris Antiquis, p. 171. 4 1 Chron. xxix. 7. and Ezra viii. 27. 5 Vide Buxtorfii Lexicon Rabbinicum, p. 577. 6 Cyropedia, lib. 8. 7 De Divinalione, lib. J. 8 In Canone. 9 Cyroped. lib. 8. where Xenophon saith, that Cyrus reigned after the death of Cyaiaies teven yean. 10 Ezra vii. 9. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 143 ot the December preceding. And if you allow a month's time after the decree of releatie for their preparing for that journey, it will fix the end of the said cap- tivity, which they were then released from, exactly in the middle of the month of November, in the first year of Cyrus; which was the very time on which i* began, just seventy years before. And that this first of Cyrus is not to be reck- oned with Ptolemy, from the taking of Babylon, and the death of Belshazzar; but with Xenophon, from the death of Darius the Mede, and the succession of Cyrus into the government of the whole empire, appears from hence, that th.s last is plainly the scripture reckoning: for therein, after the taking of Babylon and the death of Belshazzar, Dariu-s the Mede' is named in the succession be- fore Cyrus the Persian, and the years of the reign of Cyrus are not there reck- oned," till the years of the reign of Darius had ceased; and therefore, accord- ing to scripture, the first of Cyrus cannot be till after the death of Darius. There can be no doubt, but that this decree in favour of the Jews was obtain- ed by Daniel. When Cyrus first came into Babylon, on his taking the city, he found him there an old minister of state, famed for his great wisdom all over the east, and long experienced in the management of the public affairs of the go- vernment, and such counsellors wise kings always seek for: and, moreover his late reading of the wonderful hand-writing on the wall, which had puzzled ah the wise men of Babylon besides, and the event which happened immediately after, exactly agreeable to his interpretation, had made a very great and fresh ad- dition to his reputation; and therefore, on Cyrus having made himself master of the city, he was soon called for, as a person that was best able to advise and di- rect about the settling of the government on this revolution, and was consulted with in all the measures taken herein. On which occasion, he so well approv- ed himself, that afterward, on the settling of the government of the whole em- pire, he was made first superintendent, or prime minister of state, over all the provinces of it, as hath been already shown: and when Cyrus returned from his Syrian expedition again to Babylon, he found a new addition to his fame, from his miraculous deliverance from the lions' den. All which put together gave sufficient reason for that wise and excellent prince to have him in the high- est esteem; and therefore, it is said, that he prospered under him,^ as he did un- der Darius the Median, with whom, it appears, he was in the highest favour and esteem. And since he had been so earnest with God in prayer for the restora- tion of his people, as we find in the ninth chapter of Daniel, it is not to be thought that he was backward in his intercessions for it with the king, especially when he was in so great favour, and of so great authority with him. And to in- duce him the readier to grant his request, he showed him the prophecies of the prophet Isaiah,* which spake of him by name one hundred and fifty years be- fore he was born, as one whom God had designed to be a great conqueror, and king over many nations, and the restorer of his people, in causing the temple to be built, and the land of Judah and the city of Jerusalem to be again dwelt in by its former inhabitants. That Cyrus had seen and read these prophecies, Josephus tells us;^ and it is plain from scripture that he did so; for they are re- cited in his decree in Ezra for the rebuilding of the temple.*^ And who was there that should show them unto him, but Daniel, who, in the station that he was in, had constant access unto him, and of all men living had it most at heart to see these prophecies fulfilled, in the restoration of Sion? Besides, Cyrus, in his late expedition into Syria and Palestine, having seen so large and good a country as that of Judea lie wholly desolate, might justly be moved with a desire of having it again inhabited; for the strength and riches of every empire being chiefly in the number of its subjects, no wise prince would ever desire that any part of his dominions should lie unpeopled. And who could be more proper again to plant the desolated country of Judea than its former inhabitants? They were first carried out of Judea by Nebuchadnezzar to people and strengthen Babylon 1 Dan vi. 28. 2 Compare Dan. ix. 1. with the 10th chap. ver. 1. 3 Dan. i.21. vi. 28. 4 ba. xliv. 28. zlv. I. 5 Lib. 11. c. 1. 6 Ezra L 8. 144 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF and perchance, under this government of the Persians, to which the Babylo- nians were never well affected, the weakening and dispeopling of Babylon might be as strong a reason for their being sent back again into their own coun- try. But whatsoever second causes worked to it, God's overruling power, which turneth the hearts of princes which way he pleaseth, brought it to pass, that, in the first year of Cyrus's monarchy over the east, he issued out his royal decree for the rebuilding of the temple at Jerusalem, and the return of the Jews again *nto their own country. And hereon the state of Judah and Jerusalem began to be restored; of which an account will be given in the next book. BOOK III. An. 536. Cyrus 1.] — Cyrus' having issued out his decree for the restoring of the Jews unto their own land, and the rebuilding of the temple at Jerusalem, they gathered together out of the sveral parts of the kingdom of Babylon, to the number of forty-two thousand three hundred and sixty per^ions, with their ser- vants, which amounted to seven thousand three hundred and thirty-seven more. Their chief leaders were Zerubbabel," the son of Salathiel, the son of Jehoia- chin, or Jeconias, king of Judah, and Jeshua, the son of Jozadack, the high- priest. Zerubbabel (whose Babylonish name was Shezbazzar') was made gover- nor of the land,* under the title of Tirshatha, by commission from Cyrus. But Jeshua was high-priest by hneal desecent from the pontifical family; for he was the son of Jozadack," who was the son of Seraiah, that was high-priest when Jerusalem was destroyed, and the temple burned by the Chaldeans. Seraiah, being then taken prisoner by Nebuzaradan, and carried to Nebuchadnezzar to Riblah in Syria, was then put to .death by him:" but Jozadack, his son, being spared as to his life,'' was only with the rest led captive to Babylon, where he died before the decree of restoration came forth; and therefore the office of high- priest was then in Jeshua, his son; and under that title he is named,* next Zerubbabel, among the first of those that returned. The rest were Nehemiah,® Seraiah, Reelaiah, Mordecai, Bilsham, Mispar, Bigvai, Rehum, and Baanah, who were the prime leaders of the people, and the chief assistants to Zerubbabel, n the resettling of them again in their own land, and are by the Jewish writers eckoned the chief men of the great synagogue; so they call the convention of :lders, which they say sat at Jerusalem after the return of the Jews, and did here again re-establish all their affairs both as to church and state, of which they flpeak great things, as shall hereafter be shown. But it is to be observed, thaf he Nehemiah and Mordecai above mentioned, were not tlie Nehemiah and Iklordecai of whom there is so much said in the books of Nehemiah and Esther, jut quite different persons, who bore the same name. At the same time that Cyrus issued out his decree for the rebuilding of the temple at Jerusalem, he ordered all the vessels to be restored which had been taken from thence.'" Nebuchadnezzar, on the burning of the former temple, had brought them to Babylon, and placed them there in the temple of Bel his god. From thence they were, according to Cyrus's order, by Mithredath, the king's treasurer, delivered to Zerubbabel, who carried them back again to Jeru- salem. All the vessels of gold and silver that were at this time restored were five thousand four hundred; the remainder was brought back by Ezra, in the reign of Artaxerxes Longimanus, many years after. And not only those of Judah and Benjamin, but several also of the other tribes, took the benefit of this decree to return again into their own land: for some of them, who were carried away by Tiglath-Pileser," Salmaneser, and Esarhaddon, 1 Ezra. i. ii. 2 Ibid. ii. 2. 3 Ibid, i 8. 11. 4 Ibid. v. 14. 5 IChron. vi. 14, 15. 6 2 Kings xxv. 18. 7 1 Cliron. vi. 15. 8 Ezra ii. 2. iii. 2. Hag. i. 12. ii. 2. 9 Ezra ii. 2. Neh. vii. t. 10 Ezra i. 7—11. 11 Tobit. i. 11, la. xiv. 9. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ]45 still retained the true worship of God in a strange land, and did not go into the idolatrous usages and impieties of the heathens, among whom they were dis- persed, but joined themselves to the Jews, when, by a hke captivity, they were brought into the same parts; and some, after all the Assyrian captivities were left in the land. For we find some of them still there in the time of Josiah,' and they suffered the Babylonish captivity, as well as the Jews, till at length they were wholly carried away in the last of them by Nebuzaradan, in the twenty- third year of Nebuchadnezzar." And many of them had long before left their tribes for their religion,'' and incorporating themselves with their brethren of Judah and Benjamin, dwelt in their cities, and there fell into the same calamity with them in their captivity under the Babylonians. And of all these a great number took the advantage of this decree again to return and dwell in their own cities; for both Cyrus's decree as well as that of Artaxerxes extended to all the house of Israel. The decree of Artaxerxes* is by name to all the people of Israel, and that of Cyrus* is to all the people of the God of Israel, that is, as appears by the text, to all those that worshipped God at Jerusalem, which must be understood of the people of Israel as well as of Judah: for that temple was built for both, and both had an equal right to worship God there. And there- fore Ezra, when he returned, in the reign of Artaxerxes Longimanus,*^ sent a copy of the king's decree, whereby that favour was granted him through all Media, where ten tribes were in captivity; as well as thi-ough all Chaldea and Assyria, where the Jews were in captivity: which plainly implies, that both of them were included in that decree, and that being a renewal of the decree of Cyrus, both must be understood of the same extent. And we are told in scrip- ture, that, after the captivity," some of the children of Ephraim and Manasseh dwelt in Jerusalem, as well as those of Judah and Benjamin. And it appears, from several places in the New Testament,* that some of all the tribes were still in being among the Jews, even to the time of their last dispersion on the destruc- tion of Jerusalem by the Romans, though then all were comprehended under the name of the Jews, which, after the Babylonish captivity, became the general name of the whole nation, as that of Israelites was before. And this being pre- mised, it solves the difficulty which ariseth from the difference that is between the general number, and the particulars of those that returned upon Cyrus's decree. For the general number, both in Ezra and Nehemiah, is said to be forty-two thousand three hundred and sixty; but the particulars, as reckoned up in the several families in Ezra, amount only to twenty-nine thousand eight hundred and eighteen, and in Nehemiah, to thirty-one thousand and thirty-one. The meaning of which is, they are only the tribes of Judah, Benjamin, and Levi, that are reckoned by their families in both these places,'' the rest being of the other tribes of Israel, are numbered only in the gross sum, and this is that which makes the gross sum so much exceed the particulars in both the compu- tations. But how it comes to pass, that the particulars in Ezra differ from the particulars in Nehemiah, since there are several ways how this may be accounted for, and we can only conjecture which of them may be the right. I shall not take upon me to determine. Of the twenty-four courses of the priests that were carried away to Babylon, only four returned,'" and they were the courses of Jedaiah, Immer. Pashur, and Harim, which made up the number four thousand two hundred and eighty-nine persons. The rest either tarried behind, or were extinct. However, the old num- ber of the courses, as established by king David, were still kept up. For, of the four courses that returned," each subdivided themselves into six, and the new courses taking the names of those that were wanting, still kept up the old titles; and hence it is, that after this Mattathias is said to have been of the course of t aChron. xxxiv. 0. X.XXV. IB. 2 Jer. lii. 30. 3 2Chroii. xi. 16. xv. 9. xxxi. 6. 4 E/ra vii. 13. 5 Ibid. i. .T 6 Joseph Antiq. lib. 11. c. 5. 7 1 Chron. ix. i. 3. 8 Luke ii, 3G. James i. 1. Acts ixvi. 7. 9 Seder Olam Rabba, c.29. 10 Ezra ii. 36— 98k 11 Talmud. Hicrosol. in Taanith. Vol. I.— 19 146 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Joaiib/ and Zacharias, of the course of Abia," though neither of these courses were of the number of those that returned. For the new courses took the names of the old ones, though they were not descended from them, and so thev were continued by the same names under the second temple, as they had been under -he first, only the fifth course, though of the number of those that returned, changed its name, and for that of Malchijah, under which it was first established, took the name of Pashur, that is, the name of the son, instead of that of the father; for Pashur^ was the son of Malchijah. It is a common saying amoncr the Jews, that they were only the bran* that is, the dregs of the people, that re- turned to Jerusalem after the end of the captivity, and that all the fine flour stayed behind at Babylon. It is most certain, that, notwithstanding the several decrees that had been granted by the kings of Persia for the return of the Jews into their own land, there was a great many that waved taking the advantage of them, and continued still in Chaldea, Assyria, and other eastern provinces, where they had been carried; and, it is most likely, that they Avere the best and richest of the nation that did so: for, when they had gotten houses and lands in those parts, it cannot be supposed that such would be very forward to leave good settlements to new plant a country that had lain many years desolate. But of what sort soever they were, it is certain a great many stayed behind, and never again re- turned into their own country. And if we may guess at their number, by the family of Aaron, they must have been many more than those who settled again in Judea; for of the twenty-four courses of the sons of Aaron, which were car- ried away, we find only four among those that returned, as hath been already taken notice of; and hereby it came to pass, that, during all the time of the se- cond temple, and for a great many ages after, the number of the Jews in Chal- dea, Assyria, and Persia, grew to be so very great, that they were all along thought to exceed the number of the Jews of Palestine, even in those times when that country was best inhabited by them. An. 535. Cyrus 2.] — Those who made this first return into Judea, arrived there in Nisan, the first month of the Jewish year (which answers to part of March and part of April in our calendar;) for the second month of the next year is said to be in the second year after their return;^ and therefore they must then have been a whole year in the land. As soon as they came thither,^ they dispersed themselves according to their tribes, and the families of their fathers, in their several cities, and there betook themselves to rebuild their houses, and again manure their lands, after they had now, from the destruction of Jerusalem, and the flight of the remainder of the people into Egypt, on the death of Gedaliah, lain desolate and uncultivated fifty-two years, according to the number of the sabbatical years, which they had neglected to observe; for, according to the Mo- saical law, they ought to have left their lands fallow every seventh year.' But, among other commandments of God, this also they had neglected; and, there- fore/ God made the land lie desolate without inhabitants or cultivation, tiU it had enjoyed the full number of its sabbaths that it had been deprived of And this tells us how long the Jews had neglected this law of the sabbatical year: for, it is certain, the land was desolated only fifty-two years, that is, from the death of Gedaliah till the end of the seventy years' captivity, in the first year of the em- pire of Cyrus. And fifty-two sabbatical years make fifty-two weeks of years, which amount to three hundred and sixty- four years; which carries up the com- putation to the beginning of the reign of Asa; and, therefore, from that time the Jews having neglected to observe the sabbatical years, till they had deprived the land of fifty-two of them, God made that land lie desolate, without cultiva- tion or inhabitants just so many years, till he had restored to it that ^i^'U rest, which the wickedness of its inhabitants had, contrary to the law of their God, denied unto it. If we reckon the. whole seventy years of the captivity into 1 1 Mac. ii. 1. 2 Luke i. 5. :i 1 Chron. ix. 12. Neliem. xi. 12. 4 Talmud. Bab in Kidduahiak .5 Ezra iii. 8. 6 Ibid. ii. 1. 70. iii. 1. Nehem. vii. 6. 7 Levit. XXV. 2—4. 8 Ibid, xivi, 34, 35. 43. 2 Chron. xxxvi, 21. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 147 those years of desolation, which were to make amends for the sabbatical years that the land had been deprived of, then we must reckon the observation of them to have been kid aside for seventy weeks of years, that is, four hundred and ninety years. But this will carry back the omission higher up than the days of David and Samuel, in whose time it is not likely that such a breach of the law of God would have been permitted in the land. On the seventh month, which is called the month Tisri, all the people which had returned to their several cities gathered together at Jerusalem,' and there, on the first day of that month,^ celebrated the feast of trumpets. This month began about the time of the autumnal equinox, and was formerly the first month of the year,^ till it was changed at the time of the coming up of the children of Israel out of Egypt;** for that happening in the month of Abib, afterward called Nisan, that month, for this reason, had the honour given it as henceforth to be reckoned among the Israelites for the first month of the year, that is, in all ecclesiastical matters. Before this time Tisri^ was reckoned every where to begin the year, because from thence did commence (it was thought) the beginning of all things;* it being the general opinion, among the ancients, that the world was created and first began at the time of the autumnal equinox. And for this reason the Jews do stiU, in their era of the world, as well as in their era of contracts, compute the beginning of the year from the first of Tisri; and all their bills and bonds, and all other civil acts and contracts, are still dated among them according to the same computation. And from this month also they began all their jubilees and sabbatical years.'' And, therefore, although their ecclesiastical year began from Nisan, and all their festivals were reckoned according to it, yet their civil year was still reckoned from Tisri, and the first day of that month was their new year's day; and for the more solemn celebration of it, this feast of trumpets seems to have been appointed. On the tenth day of the same month was the great day of expiation,* when the high-priest made atonement for all the people of Israel; and on the fifteenth day began the feast of tabernacles,^ and lasted till the twenty-second inclusively. During all which solemnities the people stayed at Jerusalem, and employed all that time to the best of their power to set forward the restoration of God's woj ship again in that place; toward which all that had riches contributed according to their abilities. And the free-will-offerings which were made on this occasion,'' besides one hundred vestments for the priests, amounted to sixty-one thousand drachms of gold, and five thousand minas of silver, which in aU comes to about seventy-five thousand five hundred pounds of our money; for every drachm of gold is worth ten shillings of our money, and every mina of silver nine pounds; for it contained sixty shekels," and every shekel of silver is worth of our money three shillings.'^ And upon this fund they began the work. And a great sum it was to be raised by so small a number of people, and on their first return from their captivity, especially if they were only of the poorer sort, as the Rabbins say. It must be supposed, that these offerings were made by the whole nation of the Jews, that is, by those who stayed behind, as well as by those who returned; otherwise it is scarce possible to solve the matter; for all having an equal interest in that temple, and the daily sacrifices there offered up having been in the behalf of all, it is very reasonable to suppose, that all did contribute to the building of it; and that especially seeing that as long as that temple stood every Jew annually paid a half shekel,'' i. e. about eighteen pence of our money, toward its repair, and the support of the daily service in it, into what parts soever they were dispersed through the whole world. The first thing they did was to restore the altar of the Lord foi burnt-ofTerings." 1 Ezra iii. 1. 2 Ibid. iii. G. JLevit. xxiii. 21. Numb. xxix. 1. 3 Exod. xiiU. IC. xxxiv. S2. 4 Exod. xii. 2. 5 Cliaiden Paraphrasl on Exodus xii. 2. 6 Vide Scaligerum dc Euicndatione Tomponini, lib. .'». c. De Conditu Mundi, p. 36G, &c. 7 Levit. ixv. 9. 8 Lc.vH. xvi. 29. 30. xxiii 27. Numb. xii. 7. 9 Levit. xxiii. 34. Numb. xxir. 12, tut 10 Ezra ii. G9. 11 EzrM. xlv. 12. 12 Vide Burnaidum de Mensuris et Poiideribus antiquis, ?. 139. 13 Exod. XXX. 13—15 Maimonides in Shekalim cap. 1. 3. 4. 14 Ezra iii. 3. 148 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF This stood in the middle of the inner court of the temple,' exactly before the porch ,'eading into the holy place; and hereon were made the daily offerings of the morning and evening service, and all other offerings, ordinary and extra- ordinary, which were offered up to God by fire. It had been beaten down and destroyed by the Babylonians at the burning of the temple, and in the same place was it now again restored. That it was built,^ and stood in another place, with a tabernacle round it, till the rebuilding of the temple was fully finished and completed, is a fancy without a foundation. It was certainly built in its proper place,' that is, in the same place where it before stood, and there they daily offered sacrifices upon it, even before any thing else of the . temple was built about it. It was a large pile built all of unhewn stones,^ thirty-two cubit* (i. e. forty-eight feet) square at the bottom; from thence it rising one cubit, bench- ed-in one cubit; and from thence being thirty cubits square, it did rise five cu- bits, and benched-in one cubit; and from thence being twenty-eight cubits square, it did rise three cubits, and benched-in two cubits; from whence it did rise one cubit, which was the hearth upon which the offerings were burned, and the benching-in of two cubits' breadth was the passage round it, on which the priests stood when they tended the fire, and placed the sacrifices on it. So this hearth was a square of twenty-four cubits, or thirty-six feet on every side, and one cubit high, which was all made of solid brass, and from hence it was caUed the brazen altar.* For it is not to be imagined that it was all made of solid brass; for to make up so big a pile aU of that metal would cost a vast sum of money. And besides, if it were so made, it would not only be against the law, but also impracticable for the use intended. It would be against the law, because thereby they are commanded, that wheresoever they should make an altar, other than the portable altar of the tabernacle, they should make it of earth, or else of un- hewn stone." And it would be impracticable for the use intended; because, if it were all brass, the fire continually burning upon the top of it would so heal the whole, and especially that part of it next the hearth, that it would be impos- sible for the priests to stand on it when they were to come thither to officiate in tending the altar, and offering the sacrifices thereon; and that especially since they were always to ofiiciate barefooted, without any thing at all upon their feet to fence them from the heat of it. It is not indeed any where commanded that the priests should officiate barefooted; but among the garments assigned for the priests (Exod. xxviii,) shoes not being named, they were supposed therefore to be forbid, and the text saying, ver. 4, "these are the garments which they shall make," this (they say) excludes all that are not there named. And Moses being commanded, at the burning bush, to put off his shoes, '^ for that the ground on which he stood was holy, because of the extraordinary presence of God then ik that place; this they make a farther argument for it: for, say they, the temple was aU holy for the same reason, that is, because of the extraordinary presence of God there residing in the Shechinah over the mercy-seat. And for these reasons it was most strictly exacted, that the priests should be always barefooted in the temple, although their going there with their bare feet upon the marble pavement was very pernicious to the health of many of them. On the four corners of the altar, on the last benching-in, where the priests stood when they offered the sacrifices, there were fixed four small pillars of a cubit height, and a cubit on every side, in the form of an exact cube'. And these were the horns of the altar so often mentioned in scripture. The middle of each of them was hollow, because therein was to be put some of the blood of the sacrifices. The ascent up to the altar was by a gentle rising on the south side, called the kibbesh, which was thirty-two cubits in length, and sixteen in breadth, and landed upon the upper benching-in next the hearth, or the top of the altar; for to go up t( the altar by steps was forbid by the law.* 1 See Liplitfoot on the Temple, cli. 34. 2 Bishop Patrick in his Comment , on the First of Chronicles, ch. ix, 3 Ezra iii. 3. For there it is said, that they did set the altar upon its bases or foundations, t. «. upon ttM •ame bases or foundations on which it before had stood. 4 Misnaiolh in Middolh. Maimonides in Beth-Habbechirah, c. i. 2. 5 1 Kings viii. C4. 6 Exod. x«. 24.25. 7 Ibid, iii.5. .\ct8 »ii. 33. 8Exod.xx.26. I1.AX (»k;i MK ri;.>iPKK ok .ikhisakk ai nr-ETTETij^ rr^ 3 ili ^m ill a H ;«' 1 Viiu y vi^x'i :.I-!.'-i-l riirib^ ■*/« <^i<-/( < Xftr'/ rjvw A. V A-o/. /»'//' 1^ THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 149 An. 534. Cyrus 3.] — But their zeal for the temple* being that wruch had brought most of them back again into Judea, the rebuilding of this was what they had their hearts most intent upon. And therefore, having employed the first year in preparing materials,' and contracting with carpenters and masons for the work, in the second month of the second year they laid the foundation of the house;' which was done with great solemnity: for Zerubbabel the go- * AN EXPLANATION OF THE ICHNOGRAPHY OF THE TEMPLE OF JERUSALEM. (AAAA) The outer wall of the temple, which was a square of 500 cubits on every side, i. e. 2000 in the whole circuit. It was 2.5 cubits high measuring on the inside, which was the size of all the other walls of Jhe temple, as well in the inner part as the outer, exceptinc; only that of the Chel: every cubit was a foot and a half. (B) The east gate or gate of Susham. (CC) The shops where wine, oil, salt, meal, and other things used in the sacrifices, were sold; with chambers over on either side. (D)The north gate called Tcdi. (EE) The porters' lodges and chambers over on eithe.' side. Between this gate and the western corner upon a jetting out of the mountain stood the castle Jlnlonia, formerly called Baris, where the Romans kept a garrison to overawe the temple, from whence the captain of it was called the captain of the temple, Luke xxii. 52. Acts iv. 1. It was a square pile two furlongs in compass, standing at a little distance from the temple wall, and from which there was a passage by stairs down into the cloisters at the northwest corner, through which the soldiers ran down to appease the tumult risen about Paul, jlcts xxi. 32, and from which Paul spoke to the people, ver. 40. (FF) The two gates in the south side called the gates o( Huldak. (G) The porters' lodges, and chambers over on either side. (H) The gate Shallcchelh or Coiioiiiics on the west side, (I) The gate Parbor on the same side. (K) The porters' lodges, and chambers over on either side of the said two gates. (L) The two gates of Jlsuppin on the same west side. (M) The rooms and chambers over on eithersideof the said two gates, where a treasury of the temple was kept; the pile of each gate was 15 cubits broad and 30 high, and the entrance 10 cubits broad and 20 cubits high. And all the gates, as well in the inner parts of the temple as the outer, were every one of them of the same size. (N) The portico or cloisters round the temple; that on the south side was called the royal cloisters, because of its largeness, for it contained 3 isles, the middle 42 cubits and a half broad and 50 cubits high, the other two each 15 cubits broad and 25 cubits high; which was the size of all the other cloisters of this court; that on the east side was called Solomon's porch, because it stood upon that vast terrace which Solomon built up from the valley beneath, of 400 cubits height, which was the only work of Solojnon's temple that remained in our Saviour's time, and, therefore, it was called So/offl07^'s porch or cloister, ./oAn T. 23. Jlcts iii. 11. (O) The outer court of the temple called the court of the OentHes. (P)The outer enclosure of the inner courts, being a wall curiously wrought of 3 cubits height, vvithin which no Gentile was to enter, or any polluted with the dead, (tl) The wall enclosing the inner court of the temple. (R) The space between the said wall and the outer enclosure 10 cubits broad, called the Chel. (S) The stairs on the east end leading from the court of the Oentiles into the CAe/, consisting of 14 steps, each 9 inches high. (T) The stairs from the Cliel into the court of the women, consisting of 5 steps, each 9 inches high. (V) The gate entering into the court of the women on the east, called the beautiful gate of the temple, Jlcts iii. 2, because of its sumptuousness and beautiful adornments. (W) Other two gates entering into the court of the women, one on the south, and the other on the north. (X) The court of the women, so called, because thus far the women might enter to worship, but not further; it was 135 cubits square, (Y) Cloisters on three sides of the court of the women, over which were galleries for the women. (ZZ) Two rooms under the floorof the court of Israel, where the musicians did lay up their instruments. 1, 2, 3, 4. Four smaller courts in the four corners of the court of women, each 40 cubits long and 30 broad. (1) Where the J\raiar!les performed what the law required. (2) Where the wood for the altar was wormed by the blemished priests before it was used. (3) Where the leper was cleansed. (4) Where the wine and oil was laid up for the use of the altar in cellars built round it on the inside. (5) The treasury-chests, where our Saviour saw the widow cast in her two mites, he then sitting on the bench in the cloisters. For all the cloisters of the temple had benches next the inner wall for the people to sell in this court as well as in the outer. And of some place nigh these chests it is to be understood where our Saviour is said to preach in the treasury, Jolin viii. 20. (fi) The semicircular stairs leading up from the court of the women to the great brazen gate, consisting of 15 steps. (7) The great brazen gate, or the gate M^canor, leading into the inner court, in which the temple and altar stood, which court represented the tabernacle, and contained that part which was properly called the sanctuary; it was 135 cubits in breadth and 187 in length. (8) The wall parting the sanctuary from the court of the women. (9) The place within the sanctuary properly called the court of Israel: for here stood the stationary men who represented the whole people of Israel at all times of public worship, and hither came up all other Israelites when they had any sacrifice to be olfered (the ordinary place where all the rest worshipped was in the court of the women, the men on the floor, and the women in the galleries.) It contained the first aisle of the double cloisters on the east end, and both the single cloisters on the north and south sides. (10) The place properly called the court of the priests, it contained the second aisle of the double cloisters at the east end of the sanctuary; the first two cubits of its breadth next the court of Israel were taken up by the desks of the singers and musicians, the other part was the place where the priests did worship that were out of attendance. (11) The king's seat near the pillar, 2 Ckron. vi. 13, and chap, xxviii. 13. (12) Winding stairs leading up to the rooms over the gate J\ricanor, that on the right hand to the wardrobe, where the vestments for the priests were kept, and that on the left to the room where were provided the cake.s for the high-priest's daily meatoffering. (13) The room Gazeth, where the Sanhe.drin sat, part was within the sanctuary and part without; the Sanhedrin sat in the part which was without. (14) The well-room, where was a well from whence water was drawn for the use of the temple. (15) Three gates leading into the sanctuary on the south side; the first next the draw well-room was from thence called the well-gate, over which was the room of jlsHnes, where the incense was made, the second was the gate of Firstlings, aiul the third the gate of Kindling-. (Ki) The wood-room; where the wood for the altar, after it had been wormed, was laid ready for use; ove; it was the chamber of the high-priest called Paradrin, where he held the council of the temple. Q7^ A guard room for the Lcoiles. (18) A treasury-room. (10) The common fire-room and chief guard-room for the Levites. (20) The common fire-room and chief guard-room for the priests. (21) A stone in the middle of the said room, under which the keys of the temple were laid every night. (22) The room where the lamps for the daily sacrifice were kept. (23) The bath-room where the priest* bathed on their contracting uncleanness. (24) The room where the shewbread was made. (25) The roon where tlie stones of the altar polluted by \ntiochus were laid up by the Maccabees. 1 Ezra iii. 7. 2 Ezra iii. 8—10, &c. 150 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF vernor, and Jeshua the high-priest, being present with all the congregation, the trumpeters blew their trumpets, and the musicians sounded their instru- ments, and singers sung, all in praise to the Lord their God, and all the rest of the people shouted for joy while the first stones were laid; only the old men, who had seen the glory of the first temple, and had no expectation that this, which was now building by a few poor exiles lately returned into their coun- try, could ever equal that which had all the riches of David and Solomon, two of the wealthiest princes of the east, expended in the erecting of it, wept at the remembrance of the old temple, while others rejoiced at the laying the foundations of the new. And indeed the difference between the former tem- ple and this which was now building was so great, that God himself tells the prophet Haggai,' that the latter, in comparison with the former, was as noth- ing; so much did it come short of it. But this is not to be understood of its bigness; for the second temple was of the same dimensions with the first, it being built upon the very same foundations, and therefore it was exactly of the same length and breadth. Cyrus's commission may seem to make it broader; for that allows sixty cubits to its breadth," whereas Solomon's temple is said to have been but tv/enty cubits in breadth.^ But these different mea- sures are to be understood in respect of the different distances between which the said measures Avere taken. The twenty cubits' breadth, said of Solomon's temple, Avas only the breadth of the temple itself, measuring from the inside of the wall on the one side, to the inside of the wall on the other side. But the sixty cubits' breadth in Cyrus's commission was the breadth of the temple it- self, measuring from the inside of the outer w^all of it on the one side, to the iiside of the outer wall on the other side. For besides the temple itself,^ Avhich •-ontained the holy place, and the holy of holies, each twenty cubits broad, there A^ere thick walls enclosing it on each side, and without them chambers on each side; then another Avail, then a gallery, and then the outer Avails of all enclosing the whole building, being five cubits thick; AA^hich altogether made up the Avhole breadth to be seventy cubits from out to out: from Avhich deducting the five cu- bits' breadth of the outer Avail on each side, you have remaining the breadth of Cyrus's commission, that is, sixty cubits; Avhich Avas the breadth of the Avhole (2G) Three gates on the north side leading into the sanctuary; the first towards the east end, called the gat{ JVitzotz, or of singing; the second the gate Jif women, and the gate Corhan. (27) The room where the salt wa.'> kept for the service of the altar. (28) The room where the skins ofthe sacrifices were laid up. (29) Th» room where the inwards ofthe sacrifices were washed. (30) Another guard-room for the Levites, over whicfc was a guard chamber for the priests. (31) The room where the priests was set apart seven days, that was to burn the red cow. (32) Ringles where the sacrifices were tied down to be slain. (33) Eight posts on which the sacrifices were hung up to ba flayed. (34) Marble tables where the sacrifices were cut out in pieces. (35) The altar of burnt-offerings. 24 cubits square at the top and 32 at the bottom. (36) The ascent to the altar, being 32 cubits long. (37) The marble tables where the pieces of the sacrifices were laid that were ready for the altar. (38) The brazen sea. (39) The stairs up into the porch, being 12 in number. (40) The entrance into the porch, 20 cubits broad and 40 high. (a) The two pillars Jackin and Boaz standing in the entrance, (i) The porch, 11 cubits broad and CO long. (cc) The room where the butchering instruments used about the sacrifices were laid up, {d) The outer wall ofthe porch. (c)The inner wall of the porch. (/) The gate from the porch into the holy place, (if) The wicket through which the priest went to unbar the gate on the inside for the opening of it in the morning, and come out after having barred it in the evening. (A) The holy place, 20 cubits broad and 40 long, in which were (i) The candlestick having seven lamps. (A:) The shew-bread table. (/) The altar of incense, (ot) The holy of holies, 20 cubits square, in which were (w) The ark of the covenant, (o) The two Cherubims, 10 cubits high, with their faces inwards, and their wings extended to each other over the ark and to the walls on either side, (p) The veil of the temple parting between the holy and the holy of the holies, which was rent in pieces at ourSaviour's death. (?) The treasury-rooms on the sides and west end of the temple, three stories high, in which the titles were laid up. (r) The passage into the said rooms. Is) The galleries running before them. ?t) The winding staircases leading into the upper story. lu) Winding stairs leading up into the rooms over the porch and temple. \icw) The liTtfu-^ .3v or wings of the temple stretching out on either side. The length ofthe temple from out to out was 100 cubits. The breadth ofthe temple at the nnfuyi'^i- from out to out 100 cubits; the breadth of the temple beyond the llTfp-jyiov from out to out 70 cubits; the height of the temple, 100 cubits. The height of the llTipvyisv, 121 cubits; at the top of which it was said that the devil set our Saviour. — Matt. iv. 5. Delineated and described according to the Scriptures, Josephvs, and the Talmud, by H. Prideavr. Ti. D Dean of Jforwich. lHaggaiii.3. 2Ezravi.3. 3 IKings vi. 3. SChron.iii. 3. 4 See Lightfooton theTomi)le THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 151 building from the inside of one outer wall to the inside of the other. So that the difference of the said twenty cubits' breadth, and of the said sixty culiits" breadth, is no more than this, that one of them was measured from the inside to the inside of the inner walls, and the other from the inside to the inside of the outer walls of the said temple. But the glory of Solomon's temple was not in the temple itself, much less in the bigness of it; for that alone was but a small pile of building, as containing no more than one hundred and fifty feet in length, and one hundred and five in breadth, taking the whole of it together from out to out; which is exceeded by many of our parish churches. The main grandeur and excellency of it con- sisted, first. In its ornaments; its workmanship being every where exceeding curious, and its overlayings vast and prodigious: for the overlayings of the holy of holies only, which was a room but thirty feet square and thirty feet high, amounted to six hundred talents of gold,' which comes to four millions three hundred and twenty thousand pounds of our sterling money. Secondly^ In its materials; for Solomon's temple was all built of new large stones, hewn out in the most curious and artful manner, whereas the second temple was mostly built of such stones only as they dug up out of the ruins of the former. Third- ly, In its out-buildings; for the court in which the temple stood, and that with- out it called the court of the women, were built round with stately buildings and cloisters; and the gates entering thereinto were very beautiful and sumptuous. And the outer court, Avhich was a large square encompassing all the rest, of se- ven hundred and fifty feet on every side, was surrounded with a most stately and magnificent cloister, sustained by three rows of pillars on three sides of it, and by four on the fourth: and all the out-buildings then lay in their rubbish, without any prospect of a speedy reparation; and there could then be no such ornaments or materials in this new temple as there were in the former. In pro- ce:A of time, indeed, all the out-buildings were restored, and such ornaments and materials were added, on Herod's repairing of it, that the second temple, after that, came little short herein of the foi'mer; and there are some who will say that it exceeded it.'- But still what was the main glory of the first temple, those extraordinary marks of the divine favour with which it was honoured, were wholly wanting in the second. The Jews reckon them up in these five particulars:^ 1. The ark of the covenant, and the mercy-seat which was upon it; 2. The Shechinah, or divine presence; 3. The Urim and Thummin; 4. The holy fire upon the altar; and, 5. The spirit of prophecy. J. The ark of the covenant was a small chest,* or cofier, three feet nine inches in length, and two feet three inches in breadth, and two feet three inches in height; in which were put the two tables of the law, as well the broken ones (say the rabbins) as the whole;* and that there was nothing else in it, when it was brought into Solomon's temple, is said in two places of scripture." But the rabbins raise a controversy concerning Aaron's rod and the pot of manna, and the original volume of the law written by Moses' own hand, whether they were not also in the ark. It is said of Aaron's rod,' and the pot of manna," that they were laid up before the testimony; and it being agreed on all hands, that by the testimony are meant the two tables, those who interpret these words [before the testimony~\ in the strictest sense, will have the said rod and pot of manna to have been laid up immediately before the tables within the ark; for otherwise, say they, they would not have been laid up before the testimony, but before the ark. But others, who do 1 aciiroii. iii. H. 2 R. Azarias in Mnor Rnaini, part 3. c. 51. 3 Talmud Bah in Yoma, c. 1. f. 21. and Talmud llierosol. in Taanitli.c. 2. f. 65. 4 Exod. xxv. 10—22. 5 For th(> proof of this they hrin;; the second verse of the tenth chapter of Deuteronomy, which they read thus: " And [ will write on the tahles the words that were in the first tables, which thou breakedst.and hast put in the ark.'' And it is true, the word Kvcshaviata, i. c. " tliou hast put." in the preter tense; Ixit it being with a vau before it, that turns the preter tense into tha future, and therefore it must be read. " thou shall put them," as in our iranslalion.and not, "thou hast put them,'' as the fautorsof this opinion would have it. (■> 1 Kings viii. il. 2 Chron. v 10. 7 Numb. ivii. 10. 8 Exod. xvi. 3.1, wliere "to lay up before the I,ord,'' is, by the Jewish commentators, interpreted as tht ume with " before the testimony of the Lord." 152 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF not understand the words in so strict a sense, say, they were laid up in the holy of holies without the ark, in a place just before it: thinking that in this position, without the ark, they may be as well said to be laid up before the testimony or tables of the law, as if they had been placed immediately before them within the ark. But the holy apostle St. Paul decides this controversy, for he posi- tively tells us, "That within the ark were the golden pot that had manna, and Aaron's rod, and the tables of the covenant.'" As to the book, or volume of the law, it being commanded to be put mitzzad,^ i. e. on the side of the ark those who interpret that word of the inside, place it within the ark, and those who interpret it of the outside, place it on the outside of it, in a case or coffei made on purpose for it, and laid on the right side; meaning, by the right side, that end of it which was on the right hand. And the last seem to be in the right as to this matter; for, first. The same word, miizzad^ is made use of, where it is said, that the Philistines sent back the ark with an offering of jewels of gold put in a coffer hy the side of it. And there it is certain, that word must be un- derstood of the outside, and not of the inside. Secondly, The ark was not of capacity enough to hold the volume of the whole law of Moses, with the other things placed therein. Thirdly, The end of laying up the original volume of the law in the temple was, that it might be reserved there as the authentic copy, by which all others were to be corrected and set right; and, therefore, to answer this end, it must have been placed so as that access might be had thereto on all occasions requiring it; which could not have been done, if it had been put with- in the ark, and shut up there by the cover of the mercy-seat over it, which was not to be removed. And, fourthly. When Hilkiah, the high-priest,^ in the time of Josiah, found the copy of the law in the temple, there is nothing said of the ark; neither is it there spoken of, as taken from thence, but as found elsewhere in the temple. And, therefore, putting all this together, it seems plain that the volume of the law was not laid within the ark, but had a particular coffer or re- positoiy of its own, in which it was placed on the side of it. And the word mitzzad, which answers to the Latin a latere, cannot truly bear any other mean- ing in the Hebrew language. And therefore the Chaldee paraphrase, which goes under the name of Jonathan Ben Uzziel, in paraphrasing on these words of Deuteronomy — " Take this book of the law, and put it in the side of the ark of the covenant,''^ renders it thus, " Take the book of the law, and place it in a case or coffer, on the right side of the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God." Over the ark was the mercy-seat,'' and it was the covering of it. It was all made of solid gold, and of the thickness (say the rabbins) of a hand's-breadth. At the two ends of it were two cherubims, looking inward toward each other, with wings expanded, which embracing the whole circumference of the mercy- seat, did meet on each side in the middle; all which (say the rabbins") was made out of the same mass, without joining any of the parts by solder.* Here it was where the Sechinah, or divine presence, rested both in the tabernacle and tem- ple, and was visibly seen in the appearance of a cloud over it; and from, hence the Divine oracles were given out by an audible voice, ^ as often as God Avas con- sulted in the behalf of his people. And hence it is that God is so often said in scripture to dwell between the cherubims,'" that is, between the cherubims on the mercy-seat, because there was the seat or throne of the visible appearance of his glory among them. And for this reason the high-priest appeared before this mercy-seat once every year,'' on the great day of expiation, when he was to make his nearest approach to the divine presence, to mediate and make atonement for the whole people of Israel. And all else of that nation, who served Gk>d according to the Levitical law, made it the centre of their worship, 1 Heb. ix. 4, and hereto agree Abarbaiiel on 1 Kings viii. 9. and R. Levi Ben Gersom. 2 Deut. Kxxi. 26. 3 1 Sam. vi. 8. 4 2 Kings xxii. 8. 5 Deut. xxxi. 26. 6 Exod. xiv. 17—24 7 R. Levi Ben Gersom, R. Solomon, Abarbanel, and others. 8 Levit. -xvi. 2. 9 Exod. XXV. iK. Numb. vii. 89. 10 1 Sam. iv. 4. 2 Sam. vi. 2. 2 Kings xix. 15. 1 Ohron. xiii.6. Ps. Ixn. 1. ic. 1. 11 Levit. XVI. 29— 34 Numb. xxix. 7. Heb. ix. 7. Talmud in Yuma. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 153 not only in the temple when they came up thither to worship, but every where else in their dispersion through the whole world, whenever they prayed, they turned their faces toward the place where the ark stood,' and directed all their devotions that way. And therefore the author of the book Cozri jusHy saith,* that the ark, with the mercy-seat and cherubims, were the foundation, root, heart, ind marrow, of the whole temple, and all the Levitical worship therein performed And therefore, had their nothing else of the first temple been wanting in the second but the ark only, this alone would have been reason enough for the old men to have wept when they remembered the first temple in which it was, and also for the saying of Haggai, that the second tem])le was as nothing in comparison of the first,^ so great a part had it in the glory of this temple as long as it remained in it. However, the defect was supplied as to the outward form; for in the second temple there was also an ark made of the same shape and dimensions with the first, ^ and put in the same place. But though it was there substituted in its stead (as there was need that such a one should for the service that was annually performed before it on the great day of expiation,) yet it had none of its prerogatives or honours conferred upon it; for there were no tables of the law, no Aaron's rod, no pot of manna in it, no ajipearance of the divine glory over it, no oracles given from it. The first ark was made and consecrated by God's appointment, and had all these prerogatives and honours given unto it by him. But the second, being appointed and substituted by man only, to be in the stead and place of the other, could have none of them. And the only use that was made of it, was to be a representative of the former on the great day of expiation, and to be a repository of the holy scriptures; that is, of the original copy of that collection which was made of them after the captivity by Ezra, and the men of the great synagogue, as will be hereafter related: for when this copy was perfected, it was there laid up in it. And, in imitation hereof, the Jews in all their synagogues have a like aik or coffer,^ of the same size or form, in which they keep the scriptures belonging to the synagogue; and from whence they take it out with great solemnity whenever they use it, and return it with the like when they have done with it. That there was any ark at all in the second temple, many of the Jewish writers do deny; and say, that the whole service of the great day of expiation was per- formed in the second temple, not before any ark, but before the stone on which the ark stood in the first temple.® But since, on their building of the second temple, they found it necessary, for the carrying on of their worship in it, to make a new altar of incense, a new shew-bread table, and a new candlestick, instead of those which the Babylonians had destroyed, though none of them could be consecrated as in the first temple, there is no reason to believe but that they made a new ark also; there being as much need of it, for the carry- ing on of their worship, as there was of the others. And since the holy of ho- lies, and the veil that was drawn before it, were wholly for the sake of the ar"k, what need had there been of these in the second temple, if there had not been the other also? Were it clear, that it is the figure of the ark that is* on the triumphal arch of Titus, still remaining at Rome, this would be an unde- niable demonstration for what I here say; for therein his triumph for the taking of Jerusalem being set forth in sculpture, there is to be seen, even to this day, carried before him in that triumph the golden candlestick, and another figure, which Adrichomius and some others say is the ark: but Villalpandus, Corne- lius a Lapide, Ribara, and the generality of learned men who have viewed that triumphal arch, tell us that it is the table of shew-bread. The obscurity of the figures, now almost worn out by length of time, makes the difficulty: but, by the exactest draughts that I have seen of it, it plainly appears to have 1 1 Kines viii. 48. Dan. vi. 10. 2 Part 2. s.28. 3 Chap. "ii. 3. 4 Lightfoot on the temple, r. M. s. 4. 5 Vide Buxtorfii SynaKogam, c. 14. 6 This the rabbins call the stone of foundation, and give ua a great deal of trash about t. See the Mishna In Yoma, and Biixtorf. dp Aica, c. 22. Vol. I.— 20 154 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF beelrthe shew-bread table, especially from the two cups on the top of it; for two such cups filled with frankincense were always put upon the si .nv-bread table, but never upon the ark. Josephus, who was present at the triumph of Titus, and saw the whole of it, tells us of three things therein carried before him:" first. The shew-bread table; secondly. The golden candlestick (which he mentions in the same order as they are on the arch;) and, thirdly. The law, which is not on the arch. Most likely it w^as omitted there only for want of room to engrave it: for as there is the figure of a table carried aloft before the shew-bread table, and another before the golden candlestick, to express by the writings on them what the things were which they were carried before; so, aftei the golden candlestick, there is on the said arch a third table without any thing after it, the arch there ending without affordmg room for any other sculpture; where the thing omitted, no doubt was what Josephus saith was carried in the third place, that is, the law; which is not to be understood of any common vo- lume (of which there were hundreds every where in common use, both in their synagogues and in private hands,) but of that which was found in the temple (as the other two particulars were,) and laid up there, as the authentic and most sacred copy of it. And it cannot be imagined it should be carried otherwise, than in that repository in which it was laid, that is, in the ark which was made for it under the second temple. But, to return to the ark under the first temple, which was that I was describing: it was made of wood," excepting only the mercy-seat, but overlaid with gold both in the inside and the outside, and it had a ledge of gold surrounding it on the top, in form of a crown; into which, as into a socket, the cover was let in. The place where it stood was the innermost and most sacred part of the temple,^ called the holy of holies, and sometimes the most holy place, which was ordained and made on purpose for its reception; the w^hole end and reason of that most sacred place being none other but to be a tabernacle for it. This place or room was of an exact cubic form,^ as being thirty feet square, and thirty feet high. In the centre of it the ark was placed upon a stone (say the rabbins,^ rising there three fingers'- nreadth above the floor, to be as it were a pedestal for it. On the two sides '•){ it stood two cherubims fifteen feet high,** one on one side, and the other on :he other side, at equal distance betAveen the centre of the ark and each side wall; where, having their wings expanded, with two of them they touched the said side walls, and with the other two they did meet and touch each other ex- actly over the middle of the ark; so that the ark stood exactly in the middle be- tween these two cherubims. But it is not in respect of these, that God is so often said in scripture to dwell between the cherubims, but in respect of the cherubims only, which were on the mercy-seat, as hath been observed: for most of those places of scripture, wherein this phrase is found, were written before Solomon's temple was built; and till then there were no such cherubims in the most holy place; for they were put there in the temple onl}', and not in the tabernacle. These cherubims stood not with their faces outward, as they are 'commonly represented, but with their faces inward;'^ and therefore were in the posture of figures worshipping, and not in the posture of figures to be wor- shipped, as some fautors of idolatry do assert. The ark, while it was ambula- tory with the tabernacle, was carried by staves on the shoulders of the Levites.* These staves were overlaid with gold, and put through golden rings made for '^hem, not on the sides of the ark, as all hitherto have asserted, but on the two ends of it; which plainly appears from this, that when it was carried into the temple of Solomon, and fixed there in the most holy place, which was ordain- ed and prepared on purpose for it, the scriptures tell us, that the staves being drawn out,'' reached downward toward the holy place, which was without the most holy place, or holy of holies: for, had they been on the sides of the ark 1 Josephus (ie Bello Jiidaico, lib. 7. c. 17. 2 Exod. xxv. 10— 22. 3 1 Kiiigsviii. 16. 4 I Kings vi. 20. 5 Yoina, c. v. s. 2. 6 1 Kings vi. 2:J. 2 Chron. iii. 10. 7 2 Chron. iii. 1."^ 8 Exnd. XXV. l^^, 14, &c. and xxvii. 5. Numb. iv. 4—6. 1 Chron. xv. 15. 0 1 V'ljfs vi'i 8. 2 Chton. v. 9. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 155 lengthway, they would, on their being drawn, have reached toward the side wall, and not downward, unless you suppose the ark to have been there put sideway, with one of its ends downward, and the other upward; which no one will say. And it is a plain argument against it, that the high-priest, when he appeared before the ark on the great day of expiation, is said to have gone up to it between the staves;' but if these staves had been drawn out from the sides, there would then have been but two feet three inches between them, which would not have afforded the high-priest room enough, with all his vest- ments on, to have passed on between them toward the ark, for the performance of that duty. Neither could the bearers, in so near a position of the staves to each other, go with any convenience in the carrying of the ark from place to place on their shoulders, but they must necessarily have incommoded each other, both before and behind, in going so near together. What became of the old ark, on the destruction of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar, is a dispute among the rabbins.'^ Had it been carried to Babylon with the other vessels of the tem- ple, it would again have been brought back with them at the end of the cap- tivity. But that it was not so is agreed on all hands, and therefore it must fol- low, that it was destroyed with the temple, as were also the altar of incense, the shew-bread table, and the golden candlestick; for all these in the second temple were made anew after the rebuilding of it. However, the Jews contend that it was hid and preserved by Jeremiah, say some, out of the second book of Maccabees.'' But most of them will have it that king Josiah,"* being foretold by Huldah the prophetess that the temple would speedily after his death be de- stroyed, caused the ark to be put in a vault under ground, which Solomon, fore- seeing this destruction, had caused of purpose to be built, for the preserving of it. And, for the proof hereof, they produce the text where Josiah com- mands the Levites to put the holy ark in the house, " which Solomon the son of David king of Israel did build;"'' intei-jjreting it of his putting the ark into the said vault, where they say it hath lain hid ever since even to this day, and from thence shall be manifested and brought out again in the days of the Mes- siah; whereas the words import no more, than that Manasseh, or Ammon, hav- ing removed the ark from whence it ought to have stood, Josiah commanded it again to be restored into its proper place. Other dotages of the rabbins con- cerning this ark I forbear troubling the reader with. n. The second thing wanting in the second temple which was in the first, w^as the Shechinah, or the divine presence, maniiested by a visible cloud resting over the mercy-seat, as hath been already shown. This cloud did there first appear when Moses consecrated the tabernacle, and was afterward, on the con- secrating of the temple by Solomon, translated thither. And tliere it did con- tinue in the same visible manner till that temple was destroyed; but, after that, it never appeared more. Its constant place was directly over the mercy-seat;" but it rested there only when the ark was in its proper place, in the tabernacle first, and afterward in the temple, and not while it was in movement from place to place, as it often was during the time of the tabernacle. III. The third thing wanting in the second temple, which Avas in the first, was the Urim and Thtanmim. Concerning this, many have written very much; but, by offering their various opinions, have heljjed rather to perplex than ex- plain the matter. The points to be inquired into concerning it, are these two, 1st. What it was? and, 2dly, What was the use of it? 1st. As to what it was, the scripture hath no where explained it any farther, than to say, that it was something which Moses' did put into the breast-plate of the high-priest. This breast-plate'* was a piece of cloth doubled, of a span square, in which were, set in sockets of gold, twelve precious stones, bearing the names of the twelve tribes of Israel engraven on them; which, being fixed i Mishna in Voma.c. 5. Maimonides in Avodhath. Yoin Haccipurim. 2 Vidp Buxtorfiuin de Area, c. 21, 22. 3 2 Mac. ii. 4 Vide Buxtorfiuin, ibid. 5 2Cliroii.xxxv. 3. 6 Levit. xvi. 2. 7 Exod. xxviii. 30. Levit. viii b. 8 Ibid, .\xviii. 15—30. xxix. 8—21. 156 CX)NNEX10N OF THE HISTORY OF .to the ephod, or upper vestment of the high-priest's robes, was worn by him on his breast on all solemn occasions. In this breast-plate the Vnm and Thammim, say the scriptures/ were put. They who hold them to have been some corpo- real things there placed beside the stones, will have them to be enclosed within the folding or doubling of the breast-plate, which, they say, was doubled foi this very purpose, that it might be made fit, as in a purse, to contain them in it. Christophorus a Castro,'' and from him Dr. Spencer,^ teUs us, that they were two images, which being thus shut up in the doubling of the breast-plate, did from thence give the oracular answer, by a voice. But this is a conceit, which a late very learned man hath sufficiently shown to be both absurd and impious,'' as savouring more of heathenism and idolatry, than of the pure institution of a divine law. Some will have them to be the Tetragrammaton,^ or the ineffable name of God, which being written or engraven, say they, in a mysterious man ner, and done in two parts, and in two different ways, were the things signified by the Urim and Thummim, which Moses is said to have put into the breast- plate; and that these did give the oracular power to it. And many of the rab- bins go this way;* for they have all of them a great opinion of the miraculous power of this name: and, therefore, not being able to gainsay the evidence which there is for the miracles of Jesus Christ, their usual answer is, that he stole his name out of the temple,' from the stone of foundation on which it was there written (that is, the stone on which the ark formerly stood,) and keeping it hid always about him, by virtue of that did all his wondrous works. Others, who hold in general for the addition of some things corporeal, denoted by the means of JJrim and Tkummim^ think not fit to inquire, what they were as to the particular, but are of opinion, that they were things of a mysterious nature, hid and closed up in the doubling of the breasf-plate, which Moses only knew of, who did put them there, and no one else was to pry into; and that these were the things that gave the oracular power to the high-priest, when he had the breast-plate on. But this looking too much like a talesme, or a spell, which were of those abominations that God abhorred, it will be safest to hold, that the words Urim and Thummim meant no such things, but only the divine virtue and power, given to the breast-plate in its consecration, of obtaining an oraculous answer from God, whenever counsel was asked of him by the high- priest with it on, in such manner as his word did direct; and that the names of Urim and Thummim were given hereto only, to denote the clearness and per- fection which these oracular answers always carried with them; for Urim signi- fieth light, and Thummim, ])erfection: for these answers were not, like the hea- then oracles, enigmatical and ambiguous, but always clear and manifest; not such as did ever fall short of perfection, either of fulness in the answer, or cer- tainty in the truth of it. And hence it is, that the Septuagint translate Urim and Thummim by the words AnA.u.a-.- x:.. A\r,h,^v, i. e. manifestation and t?~uth, be- cause all these oracular answers given by Urim and Thummim were always clear and manifest, and their truth ever certain and infallible. 2. As to the use which was made of the Unm and Thummim, it was to ask counsel of God in difficult and momentous cases relating to the Avhole state of Israel. In order whereto the high-priest did put on his robes, and over them his breast-plate, in which the Urim and Thummim were, and then presented himself before God to ask counsel of him. But he was not to do this for any pri- vate man,® but only for the king, for the president of the Sanhedrin, for the general of the army, or for some other great prince or public governor in Israel, 1 Exod. xxviii. 30. Levit. viii. 8. 2 De Vaticinio. 3 In Dissertatione de Urim et Thummim. 4 Dr. Pocock in his Comment on Hosea, ch. iii. ver. 4. 5 Paraphrasis Jonathaiiis in Exod. xxviii. 30. Liber Zohar, fol. 105. Editioiiis Cremonensis. 6R. Solomon, R. Moses Ben Nachman, R. Becai, R. Levi Ben Gersom, aliigne. 7 Toledoth Jesu ex editione Wagenselii, p. 6, 7. Raymundi Pugio Fidei, part 2. c. 8. Buxtorfii Lexicon Rab. p. 2541. 8 R. David KiiMChi, R. Abraham Seva, Aben Ezra, aliique. 9 Mishnah in Yoma, c. 7. s. 5. The Talmudists prove this from Numb, xxvii. 21. See MaimonidM in Cele Hammikdash, c. 10. v. 12. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. I57 and not for any private affairs,' but for such only as related to the public in- terest of the nation, either in church or state: for he appeared before God with the names of the twelve tribes of Israel upon his breast-plate; and, therefore, whatever counsel he asked was in the name and on the behalf of all the tribes, and consequently it must have been concerning matters which related pub- licly to them all. The place where he presented himself before God, was be- fore the ark of the covenant,^ not within the veil of the holy of holies (for thither he never entered but once a year, on the great day of expiation,) but without the veil in the holy place: and there standing with his robes and breast-plate on, and his face turned directly toward the ark and the mercy- seat over it, on which the divine presence rested, he proposed the matter con- cerning which counsel of God was asked, and directly behind him at some distance without the holy place, perchance at the door (for farther no layman could approach,) stood the person in whose behalf the counsel was asked, whether it were the king, or any other public officer of the nation, there, with all humility and devotion expecting the answer that should be given. But how this answer was given, is that which is made the great dispute. The most common received opinion among the Jews is,^ that it was by the shining and protuberating of the letters in the names of the twelve tribes graven on the twelve stones in the breast-plate of the high-priest, and that in them he did read the answer. They explain it by the example which we have in the first chapter of the book of Judges.* There the children of Israel, either by the president of the Sanhedrin, or some other officer instructed with the public in- terest, did ask counsel of God: " Who should go up for us against the Ca- naanites first to fight against them?"^ The answer given by the high-priest, who did by Unm and Thummim then ask counsel of God for them, was, " Ju- dah shall go up:"^ for having asked the counsel, he did immediately (say they) look into the breast-plate, and saw those letters shining above the rest, and protuberating beyond them, which being combined into words, made up the answer which was given. And this notion was very ancient among them; for both Josephus'' and Philo Juda^us^ have it; and from them several of the an- cient fathers of the Christian church give the same account of this matter.* But there are unanswerable objections against it; for, 1st, All the letters of the Hebrew alphabet are not to be found in these twelve names; four of them, that is, Cheth, Teth, Zaddi, and Kojjh, being wholly wanting in them; and, therefore, an answer could not be given this way to every thing concerning which counsel might have been asked of God. To solve this, they have added the names of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to the breast-plate. But still the let- ter Teth will be wanting; and, therefore, farther to botch up the matter, they have added also these words. Col elle shilte Israel, i. e. All these are the tribes of Israel. But this is not only without any foundation in scripture, but rather con- trary to it; for the description of the breast-plate in scripture being very par- ticular, in the reckoning up of all its parts, seems plainly to exclude whatever is not there named. 2dly, The asserters of this opinion do not tell us where the words which they would have added were placed in the breast-plate. They could not be written or engraven on the breast-plate itself; for that was only a piece of cloth. They must therefore be engraven, either on some of the twelve stones, or else on others set there on purpose for it. They could not be on any of the twelve stones, because on them were only engraven the names of the twelve tribes of Israel; and they could not be on other stones, because there were none other set there, but these twelve stones only. And in these two 1 Abarbancl in Exoil. xxviii. et in Deut. xxxiii. R. Levi Ben Gersom. Maimonid. ibid.aliiquc. 3 Mainioniilcs, ibid. Yall NEW TESTAMENT. 163 prophecies which foretold them. But notwithstanding all this, the Jews do not reckon him to be a prophet;' and therefore place his prophecies only among the Hagiographa: and they serve the Psalms of David after the same rate. The reason which they give for it in respect of both is, that they lived not the prophetic manner of life, but the courtly;- David in his own palace, as king of Israel, and Daniel in the palace of the king of Babylon, as one of his chief counsellors and ministers in the government of that empire. And, in re- spect of Daniel, they farther add, that, although he had divine revelations delivered unto him, yet it was not in the prophetic way, but by dreams and visions of the night,' which they reckon to be the most imperfect man- ner of revelation, and below the prophetic. But Josephus,* who was one of the ancientest writers of that nation, reckons him among the greatest of tlic prophets; and says farther of him, that he had familiar converse with God, and did not only foretell future events, as other prophets did, but also determined the time when they should come to j)ass; and that, whereas other prophets only foretold evil things, and thereby drew on them the ill-will both of princes and people, Daniel was a prophet of good things to come, and, by the good report which his predictions carried with them on this account, reconciled to himself the good-will of all men. And the event of such of them as were accomplished, procured to the rest a thorough belief of their truth, and a general opinion that they came from God. But what makes most for this point with us, against all that contradict it, our Saviour Christ acknowledgeth Daniel to be a prophet; for he so styles him in the gospel:* and this is a sufficient decision of this matter. But Daniel's wisdom reached not only to things divine and political, but also to arts and sciences, and particularly to that of architecture. And Jo- sephus^ tells us of a famous edifice built by him at Susa in the manner of a castle (which he saith was remaining in his time,) and finished with such wonderful art, that it then seemed as fresh and beautiful as if it had been newly built. Within this edifice, he saith, was the place where the Persian and Parthian kings used to be buried; and that, for the sake of the founder, the keeping of it was committed to one of the Jewish nation, even to his time. The copies of Josephus that are now extant, do indeed place this build- ing in Ecbatana in Media; but St. Jerome,^ who gives us the same account of it word for word out of Josephus, and professeth so to do, placeth it in Susa in Persia; which makes it plain, that the copy of Josephus, which he made use of, had it so: and it is most likely to have been the true reading; for Susa be- ing within the Babylonish empire, the scripture tells us, that Daniel had some- times his residence there;* and the common tradition of those parts hath been for many ages past, that Daniel died in that city, which is now called Tuster,® and there they show his monument even to this day. And it is to be observed, that Josephus calls this building Baris, which is. the same name by which Daniel himself calls the castle or palace at Shushan or Susa. For what we translate, at Shushan in the palace,'" is, in the original, Beshushan Habirah, where, no doubt, the Birah of Daniel is the same with the Baris of Josephus; and both signify this palace or castle there built by Daniel, while he was go- vernor of that province: for there he did the king's business,"" i. e. was go- vernor for the king of Babylon. Part of the book of Daniel is originally written in the Chaldee language, that is, from the fourth verse of the second chapter to the end of the seventh chapter: for there the holy prophet treating of Babylonish afiairs, he wrote of them in the Chaldee or Babylonish language. All the rest is in Hebrew. The 1 nieronyriii Prxfatlo in naniolom. Maimonides in Moreh Nevocni.n, part 2. c. 45. 2 Vide Groliiim in I'rxfatione ad Comment, in Esaiam, et Huetii demonstrationem Evangelicam, projn 4. C. 14. 8. de prophotia Danirlis. 3 Maimonides, ibid. J)avi(l Kimclii in Praifatione ad Comment, in Paalmos. 4 Antiq. lib. 10. c. 12. 5 Matt. xxiv. 15. fi Antiq. lib. x. c. 12. 7 Comment, in Dan. viii. 2. 8 Susa, or Shuslian. 9 Benjaminis Itincrarium. 10 Dan. viii. 2. 11 Ibid. 27. 164 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Greek translation of this book/ used by the Greek churches through all the eastern countries, was that which was translated by Theodotion. In the Vul- gar Latin edition of the Bible, there is added in the third chapter, after the twenty-third verse, between that and the twenty-fourth verse, the Song of the Three Children; and, at the end of the book, the History of Susanna, and of Bel and the Dragon; and the former is made the thirteenth and the other the fourteenth chapter of the book in that edition. But these editions were never received into the Canon of holy writ by the Jewish church;^ neither are- they extant either in the Hebrew or the Chaldee language; nor is there any evi- dence that they ever were so. That there are Hebraisms in them can prove no more, than that they were written by a Hebrew in the Greek tongue, who transferred the idioms of his own tongue into that which he wrote in, as is usual in this case. And that they were thus originally written in the Greek tongue by some Hellenistical Jew, without }j3,ving any higher fountain, from whence they are derived, appears from this, that in the History of Susanna, Daniel, in his replies to the elders, alludes to the Greek names of the trees,* under which, they said, the adultery, which they charged Susanna with, was committed; which allusions cannot hold good in any other language. How- ever, the church of Rome allows them to be of the same authority with the rest of the book of Daniel, and, by their decree at Trent,"* have given them an equal place with it among the canonical scriptures. But the ancients never did so. Africanus, Eusebius, and ApoUinarius, have rejected those pieces, not only as being uncanonical, but also as fabulous; and Jerome' gives the History of Bel and the Dragon no better title than that of the fables of Bel and the Dragon.® And others who have been content to admit them for instruc- tion of manners, have yet rejected them from being parts of the canonical scripture; whom the Protestant churches following herein, do give them a place in their Bibles among the apocryphal writings, but allow them not to be canonical. In the death of Daniel, the Jews having lost a powerful advocate in the Per- sian court, this gave their enemies the greater advantage of succeeding in their designs against them. But although they prevailed by underhand dealings to divert those encouragements, which Cyrus had ordered for the carrying on of the work, yet they could not put an open stop to it. So that, as far as the Jews of themselves were able, they still carried on the work; in which they were much helped by the Tyrians and the Zidonians,'' not only in furnishing them with masons, and other workmen ajid artificers, but chiefly in bringing the ce- dars, which Cyrus had given them, out of the forest of Mount Libanus, from thence to Joppa by sea; from which place they were carried by land to Jerusa- lem. For the Tyrians and Zidonians, being wholly given to traffic and naviga- tion, did very little addict themselves to the planting of ohveyards, or vineyards, or the tillage of the ground, .neither had they indeed any territory for either: for their gain being very great by sea, they did not set themselves to make any enlargements by land, but were in a manner pent up within the narrow precincts of the cities in which they dwelt; and therefore, having very little of corn, wine, or oil of their own, they depended mostly on their neighbours for these provi- sions; from whom they had them either for their money, or by way of barter and exchange for other commodities, which they supplied them with, and they were mostly furnished this way out of the Jews' country,® and therefore they readily assisted them with their labour and shipping, to be suppUed with these necessa- l Hieronymus in Proefatione ad Danielem ot in Proremio ad Comment, in eiindem. 2 Ibid. 3 In the examination of the elders, when one of them said, That he sain the adultery committed irra trx'vav, i.e. under a masttck tree. Daniel answers in allusion to o-^ivov, The angel of God hath received sentence of Ood o-jjirxi ITS ^torot, i. e. to cut thee in two. And when the other elder said it was utto ^pivJi-, i. e. under an holm tree, Daniel answers in allusion to the word :rp,,'ov. The angel of the Lord wailcth with the stcord ^firxi a-i «!r the Babylonians and tlio Persians, at this time, bcpari their year from the bcginniiind year of Darius, wlialsoever was acted from the beniiiiiing of January, within a year after, must be in the third year of Darius, according to the Ratiylonish account, and also according to the exact, truth of the matter; for I)ariM9 bfgau his reign with the beginning of tht Babylonish year. 12 Ezra v. 13—17. 13 Herodotus, lib. 3 176 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF and that it would tend to the prejudice of the king; whereon Tatnai, bcmg ac- companied by Setharboznai (who seems to have been then governor of Samaria/ came to Jerusalem to take an account of what was there doing. But Tatnai, being a man of temper and justice, after he had made a view of the building, did not proceed roughly and rashly to put a stop to it, but first inquired of the elders of the Jews, by what authority they had gone on with it. And they hav- ing produced to him Cyrus's decree, he would not take upon him to contradict the same, or order any thing contrary to it upon his own authority; but first wrote letters to the king, to know his pleasure concerning it; wherein he fairly stated the case, setting forth the matter of fact, and also the Jews' plea of Cy- rus's decree, for the justifying of themselves herein; and thereon requested, that search might be made among the records of the kingdom, whether there were any such decree granted by Cyrus or no, and that thereon the king would be pleased to signify unto them what he Avould have done herein. Whereon* search being made, and the decree being found among the rolls in the royal pa- lace at Ecbatana in Media, where Cyrus was when he granted it, the king re- solved to confirm the same: for having lately married two of the daughters of Cyrus, the better to fortify his title to the crown thereby, he thought it concern- ed him to do every thing that might tend to support the honour and veneration which were due to the memory of that great prince: and, therefore, would suf- fer nothing to be infringed of that which he had so solemnly granted, but ordered his royal decree to be drawn; wherein recitement being made of the decree of Cyrus, he commanded it in every particular to be observed, and sent it to Tatnai and Setharboznai, to see it fully and effectually put in execution, decreeing, that whosoever should alter the same, or put any obstruction to it, should have his nouse puUed down, and that a gaUows being made of the timber of it, he should be hanged thereon. On the twenty-fourth day of the eleventh month" (that is about the beginning of our February,) the prophet Zechariah had in a vision that revelation made unto him which is contained in the book of his prophecies, from the seventh verse of the first chapter to the ninth verse of the sixth chapter. The substance of which is, to express the mercy that God would show unto his people, in the restoration and redemption of Sion, and the vengeance which he would execute upon those that had oppressed them. Jin. 518. Darius 4.] — About the beginning of the fourth year of Darius, his decree, which confirmed that of Cyrus in favour of the Jews, was brought to Jerusalem. It was about the beginning of the former year that Tatnai sent to the king about it, and less than a year's time cannot be well allowed for the despatch of such an affair: for the king, then residing in Shushan, in Persia, was at such a distance from Judea, that the journey of the messenger thither to him, could not take up less than three months' time (for^ Ezra was four months in coming to Judea from Babylon, which was at least one quarter of the way nearer;) and, on his arrival, it cannot be supposed, that in a court, where the government of so large an empire was managed, he could immediately come at a despatch. The multiplicity of other affairs there agitated must necessarily detain him some time, before it could come to his turn to be heard for the deliveiy of his message; and when he had obtained an order to search among the records of the empire for the decree of Cyrus .(which we cannot imagine to have been without a far ther time of attendance,) he or some other messenger first went to Babylon to make the search there; and, on his failing of finding it in that place, he went from thence to Ecbatana/ the capital of Media, where, having found the enrol- ment of it (for it seems Cyrus was there when he granted it,) he returned with it from thence to Shushan. In which three journeys and two searches, con- sidering the distance of the said three places from each other, and the vast number of records which, in the registers of so large an empire, must be turned over for the finding of that which was searched for, less than five months could I i'>.ra vi. 2 Zechariah i. 7. 3 Ezra vii. 9. 4 This is the same that is now called Tauria. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 177 not have been expended. And when the record of Cyrus's decree was brought from Ecbatana to Shushan, a month is the least time that can be supposed for the despatch of the new decree which Darius made in confirmation of it; and then three months more must be allowed for the carrying of It to Tatnai, and from him to Judea. All which put together, make a full year from the time of Tatnai's writing his letter, to the time of the arrival of Darius's decree in answer to it. When Tatnai and Setharboznai, on the perusal of it, found how stricth' the king requiicd obedience to be given thereto, they durst not but act in confoi- mity to it;' and, therefore, they did immediately let the Jews know hereof, and forthwith took care to have it fully and effectually put in execution. And from that time the building of the house went on so successfully, that it was fully finished within three years after: for, by virtue of this decree, the Jews were not only fully authorized to go on with the building, but were also furnislied with the expenses of it out of the taxes of the province. This had been grunted by Cyrus in the former decree, but by the underhand dealings of the Samaritans and other enemies, in corrupting those through whose hands the administration of the pubhc affairs and pubUc revenues passed, this part of Cyrus's decree was rendered ineffectual during a great part of his reign, and through tlie whole reign of Cambyses. And, therefore, during all that time, the Jews being left to carry on the work at tlieir own charges only, and they being then very poor, as being newly returned from their captivity, it went very slowly on. But, being now helped again by the king's bounty, they followed it with that dili- gence, that they soon brought it to a conclusion. The publishing of this decree at Jerusalem may be reckoned the thorough restoration of the Jewish state; and, from the thorough destruction of it, in the burning of the city and temple of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, to this time, is just seventy years. The time falUng so exactly, and the prophet Zechariah confirming it, by expressing, under the fourth year of Darius," that the mourn- ing and fasting of the Jews for the destruction of Jerusalem, and the utter driving of them out of the land on the death of Gedaliah, was then just seventy years:^ this hath given a plausible handle to some for the placing of the beginning of the seventy years of the Babylonish captivity, spoken of by Jeremiah, at the destruction of Jerusalem, and the end of them, at the pubhcation of this decree of Darius. But the scripture plainly tells us, that these seventy years, as pro- phecied of by the prophet Jeremiah,'' began from the fourth year of Jehoiakim, and expired on the first of Cyrus,* on his then granting his decree for the re- building of the temple, and the return of the Jews again into their own land. But this matter will admit of a very easy reconciliation, for both computations may very well stand together; for, though the Babylonish captivity did begin from the fourth of Jehoiakim, wlicn Nebuchadnezzar first subjugated the land, and carried away to Babylon the first captives, yet it was not completed till he had absolutely destroyed it in the eleventh year of Zedekiah, which was just eigiiteen years after. And so, likewise, though the deliverance from this cap- tivity, and the restoration of the Jewish state tlicreon, was begun by the decree of Cyrus in the first year of his reign; yet it was not com[)leted till that decree was pv.t in full vigour of execution by the decree which Darius granted in the fourth year of his reign for the confirmation of it; which was also just eighteen years after. And therefore, if we reckon from the beginning of the captivity to the beginning of the restoration, we must reckon from the fourth year of Je- hoiakim to the first of Cyrus, which v/as just seventy years; and, if we reckon from the completion of the captivity to the completion of the restoration, we must reckon from the eleventh of Zedekiah to the fourth of Darius; which was also just seventy years. So that, whether we reckon from the beginning of the captivity to the beginning of tlie restoration, or from the completing of the cap- tivity to the completing of the restoration, Jeremiah's prophecy of the seventy I Ezra vi. lU. And Joscphui Antiq, lib. 11. c. 4. 3 Zecli. vii. 1. 3 Zech. vii. 5. 4 Jer. xxr. 5 aChron. xxxvi. 20— 2:{. Vol. I.— -^a 178 CONNEXION OF 1 HE HISTORY OF years' captivity will be both ways equally accomplished; and therefore, I doubt not, but that both ways were equally intended therein, though the words of the prophecy seem chiefly to refer to the former. On the publication of this decree of Darius, and the care that was taken to have it fully put in execution, without suffering any of those devices to obstruct it, which had rendered the former decree ineffectual, the temple went on very successfully, and the state of the Jews in Judea and Jerusalem seemed so tho- roughly restored, that the Jews," who were in Babylon, on their having had an account hereof, thought it might not be any longer proper to keep those fasts, which hitherto they had observed for seventy years past, for the destruction which Judah and Jerusalem had suffered from the Chaldeans in the time of Ze- dekiah, as looking on them now to have obtained a thorough restoration from it; and therefore sent messengers to Jerusalem, Sherezer, and Regem-melech,' to ask advice of the priests and prophets that were there concerning tliis matter. For, from the time of the destruction of the city and temple of Jerusalem, the Jews of the captivity had kept four fasts, in commemoration of the calamities which then happened to their nation; the first on the tenth day of the tenth month,^ because then Nebuchadnezzar first laid siege to Jerusalem, in the ninth year of Zedekiah; the^ second on the ninth day of the fourth month, because on that day the city was taken; the third^ on the tenth day of the fifth month, because then the city and temple were burned by Nebuzaradan; and the fourth* on the third day of the seventh month, because on that day Gedaliah was slain, and the remainder of the people were thereon dispersed and driven out of the land, which completed the desolation of it. Concerning aU which fasts, and the question of the Babylonish Jews proposed concerning them, God gave them by the prophet Zechariah that answer which we have in the seventh and eighth chapters of his prophecies. Therein^ the fasts, of the fifth and seventh mouths, are said to have been observed for seventy years past. And, from the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar, according to the Jewish account (which was the seven- teenth, according to the Babylonish account,') when Jerusalem was destroyed, to the fourth year of Darius Hystaspes, when the Jewish state was again tho- roughly restored, were just seventy years, according to the Canon of Ptolemy; so the sacred and profane chronology do both exactly agree in this matter. The Jews still observe these four fasts even to this day, though not exactly on the same days in their present* calendar, as in the former. ■An. 517. Darius b.^ — In the beginning of the fifth year of Darius happened the revolt of the Babylonians,^ which cost him the trouble of a tedious siege again to reduce them, for it lasted twelve months. This city having, for many years during the Babylonish empire, been the mistress of the east, and domi- neered over all the countries round about them, could not bear the subjection which they were fallen under to the Persians, especially after they had removed the imperial seat of the empire from Babylon to Shushan; for that much dimin- ished the grandeur, pride, and wealth, of the place, which they thought they could no other Avay again retrieve, but by setting up for themselves against the Persians, under a king of their own, in the same manner as they had formerly done, under Nabopollasar, against the Assyrians. And therefore, taking the ad- vantage of the revolution which happened in the Persian empire, first on the ■death of Cambyses, and after on the slaying of the Magians, they began to lay dn all manner of provisions for the war; and, after they had covertly done this for four years together, till they had fully stored the city fdr many years to come, in the fifth year they broke out into an open revolt, which drew Darius upon I Zecli. vii. 2 2 Kings XXV. 1. Jcr. lii. 4. Zech. viii. 19. 3 2 Kings XXV. .3. Jer. xxix. 2. Zech. viii. 19. 4 Jer. lii. 12. Zech. vii. 3. 5. viii. J9. 5 Jer. xli. 1. Zech. vii. 5. viii. 19. 6 Zech. vii. 1. 7 2 Kings xxv. 8. Jer. lii. \i. 8 Their present calendar was made by R. Ilillel. about the year of our Lord 300. Their former year was a lunar year, reconciled to a solar by intercalations, but in what form is uncertain, only it was always to have its beginning about the time of the vernal equinox, to which season the products of their flocks and Ihcir nelUs, which we. e required to be u.sed at their feasts of the Passover and the Penticost, necessarily fixed it. 9 Herodotus, lib. 3. Justin, lib. I.e. 10. Polyienus, lib. 7. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 179 them, with all his forces, to besiege the city. In the beginning of the third year of Darius, we learn from the prophet Zechariah, that' the whole empire was then in peace; and therefore the revolt could not then have happened* and the message of Shcrezer and Regem-melech from Babylon,* in the fourth year of his reign, proves the same for that year also; and therefore it could not be till the fifth year that this war broke out. As soon as the Babylonians^ saw themselves begirt by such an army, as they could not cope with in the field, they turned their thoughts wholly to the supporting of themselves in the siege; in order whereto, they took a resolution the most desperate and barbarous that ever any nation practised. For, to make their provisions last the longer, they agreed to cut off all unnecessary mouths among them; and therefore, drawing together all the women and children, they strangled them all, whether wives, sisters, daughters, or young children, useless for the wars, excepting only, that every man was allowed to save one of his wives which he best loved, and a maid-servant to do the work of the house. And hereby was very signally ful- filled the prophecy of Isaiah against them, in which he foretold,* that " two things should come to them in a moment, in one day, the loss of children and widow-hood; and that these should come upon them in their perfection, for the multitude of their sorceries, and the great abundance of their enchantments." And in what greater perfection could these calamities come upon them, than when they themselves, thus upon themselves, became the executioners of them? And in many other particulars did God execute his vengeance upon this wicked and abominable city, which was foretold by several of the prophets; and the Jews were as often warned to come out of the place,* before the time of its approach, that they might not be involved in it. And especially the prophet Zechariah,^ about two years before, sent them a call from God, that is, " to Zion, that dwelt with the daughter of Babylon, to flee and come forth from that land," that they might be delivered from the plague which God was going to inflict upon it. And when Sherezer and Regem-melech returned to Baby- lon, no doubt they carried back with them, from this prophet, a repetition of the same call: and although it be no where said that they paid obedience to it, and so saved themselves, yet we may take it for certain that they did, and, by seasonably removing from Babylon before the siege began, avoided partaking of the calamities of it: for almost all the prophecies concerning this heavy judgment upon Babylon, speaking of it as the vengeance of God upon them foi their cruel dealings with his people, M'hen they were delivered into their hands; and they all at the same time promising peace, mercy, and favour, to all thai were of his people, and particularly such a promise having been sent them but the year before by Sherezer and Regem-melech,'^ it is utterly inconsistent with the whole tenor of these sacred predictions, that any of the Jewish nation should be sufferers with the Babylonians in this war; and therefore we may assuredly infer, that they were all gone out of this place before this war began. Jin. 516. Darius (5.] — Darius having lain before Babylon a year and eight months,^ at length, toward the end of the sixth year of his reign, he took it by the stratagem of Zopyrus, one of his chief commanders: for, he, having cut off his nose and ears, and mangled his body all over with stripes, fled in this condi- tion to the besieged; where feigning to have suffered all this by the cruel usage of Darius, he grew thereby so far into their confidence, as at length to be made the chief commander of their forces; v.Iiich trust he made use of to deliver the city to his master, which could scarce have been any other way taken: for the walls, by reason of their height and strength, made the place impregnable against all storms, batteries, and assaults; and it being furnished with provisions for a great many years, and having also large quantities of void ground within the city," 1 Zcch. i. 11— 15. 2 Zech. vii. 1— 3. 3 nciodotus, lib. 3. 4 Isa. xlvii. 9. 5 Ihia. xlviii. 20. Jer. I. 8. li. ti. 9. 4.5 0 Zech ii. 6—9. 7 Zech. viii. 8 llprndotus, lib. 3. Justin, lib. 1. c. It). Polya>.nii?, lib. 7. 9 Cliiintus Curtiiis. lib. .'5. c. 1. For 'J(l stadia habitatur,ccetcra scrunt coluntquc, ul si extefna vis ingnial, •bscssi? alioienta ex ii)siu3 iirbis solo subministrcutur. i80 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF r^m the cultivation of which it might annually be supplied with much more, i\ ^uld never have been starved into a surrender; and therefore, at length, it must have wearied and worn out Darius and all his army, had it not been thus deli- vered into his hands by this stratagem of Zopyrus, for which he deservedly re- warded him with the highest honours he could heap on him all his life after. As soon as Darius was master of the place, he took away all their hundred gates,' and beat down their walls* from two hundred cubits (which was their former height) to fift}'- cubits; and of these walls only, Strabo,'' and other after-writers, are to be understood, when they describe the walls of Babylon to be no more than fifty cubits high. And as to the inhabitants, after having given them for a spoil to his Persians, who had been before their servants, according to the prophecy of Zechariah (chap. ii. 9,) and impaled three thousand of the most guilty and active of them in the revolt, he pardoned all the rest. But, by reason of the destruc- tion they had made of their women in the beginning of the siege, he was forced to send for fifty thousand of that sex out of the other provinces of the empire to supply them with wives, without which the place must soon have become de- populated for want of propagation. And here it is to be observed, that the punishment of Babylon kept pace with the restoration of Judah and Jerusalem, according to the prophecy of the pro- phet Jeremiah (chap. xxv. 12, 13,) whereby he foretold, that, "when the se- venty years of Judah's captivity should be accomplished, God would punish the king of Babylon, and that nation, for their iniquity, and the land of the Chal- deans, and would make it a perpetual desolation, and would bring upon that land all the words which he had pronounced against it." For accordingly, when the restoration of Judah began, in the first of Cyrus, after the expiration of the first seventy years, that is, from the fourth of Jehoiakim to the first of Cyrus, then began Babylon's punishment, in being conquered and subjected to the Per- sians in the same manner as they had conquered and subjected the Jews to them in the beginning of the said seventy years. And after the expiration of the se cond seventy years, that is, from the nineteenth of Nebuchadnezzar, when Ju dah and Jerusalem were thoroughly desolated, to the fourth of Darius, when the restoration of both was completed, then the desolation of Babylon was also in a great measure completed in the devastation which was then brought upon it by Darius. In the first part of their punishment, their king was slain, and their city taken; and thenceforth, from being the "lady of kingdoms,'"* and mistress of all the east, it became subject to the Persians. And Avhereas before it had been the metropolis of a great empire, this honour was now taken from it, and the imperial seat removed from thence to Shushan or Susa (for this seems to have been done in the first year of Cyrus's reign over the whole empire,) and Babylon thenceforth, instead of having a king, had only a deputy residing there, who governed it as a province of the Persian empire. And at the same time that the city was thus brought under, the country was desolated and destroyed, by the inundation that was caused, by turning of tl%e river on the taking of the City, which hath been already spoken of, and thereon it became "a possession for the bittern, and pools of water," as the prophet Isaiah foretold (chap. xiv. 23;) " and the sea came up upon Babylon, and she was covered with the multi- tude of the waves thereof," according as Jeremiah prophecied hereof (chap. li. 42.) And, in the second part of their punishment, on Darius's taking the place, all that calamity and devastation was brought upon it, which hath been already spoken of; and from that it did never any more recover itself, but languished awhile, and at length ended, according to the words of Jeremiah, "in a perpe- tual desolation." ^n. 515. Darius 7.] — In the sixth year of Darius, according to the Jewish account, and on the third day of the twelfth month, caUed the month of Adai (which answered to part of the third and part of the fourth month of the Baby- IJer. li.58. Herodol ibid. 2 Jer. 1. 15. Ii. 44. 58. Herodot. ibid. 3 Slrabo, lih. Ifi 4 lea. zlvfi. 5. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 181 ionish year, and consequently was in the seventh year of Darius, according to th*^ Babylonish account,') the building of the temple at Jerusalem was finished, and the dedication of it was celebrated by the priests and Levites, and all the rest of the congregation of Israel, with great j iy and solemnity. And, among other sacrifices then offered, there was a sin-oflering for all Israel of twelve he- goats, according to the number of the tribes of Israel; which is a farther addi- tion of proof to what hath been above said, that, on the return of Judah and Benjamin from the Babylonish captivity, some also of each of the other tribes of Israel retuined with them out of Assyria, Babylon, and Media, whither they had been before carried, and joining with them in the rebuilding of the temple (to which they had originally an equal right,) partook also in the solemnity of this dedication; otherwise there is no reason why any such offering should have been then made in their behalf. But the most of them that returned being ol the tribe of Judah, that swallowed up the names of all the rest; for from this time the whole people of Israel, of what tribe soever they were, began to be called Jews:^ and by that name they have all of them been ever since known all the world over. This work was twenty years in finishing: for so many years were elapsed, from the second of Cyrus, when it was first begun, to the seventh of Darius, when it was fully finished. During the latter part of the reign of Cyrus, and through the whole reign of Cambyses, it met with such discouragements through the fraudulent devices of the Samaritans, that it went but slowly on for all that time: and, during the usurpation of the Magians, and for almost two years after,* it was wholly suppressed, that is, till toward the latter end of the second year of the reign of Darius. But then it being again resumed, on the preaching of the prophets Haggai and Zechariah, and afterward encouraged and helped for- ward by the decree of Darius, it was thenceforth carried on with that vigour, especially through the exhortations and prophecies of the two prophets I have mentioned, that, in the beginning of the seventh year of Darius, it was fully finished, and dedicated anew to the service of God, in the manner as hath been said. In this dedication, the hundred and forty-sixth, the hundred and forty- seventh, and the hundred and forty-eighth Psalms seem to have been sung; for, in the Septuagint version, they are styled the Psalms of Haggai and Zechariah, as if they had been composed by them for this occasion; and this, no doubt, was from some ancient tradition: but, in the original Hebrew, these Psalms have no such title prefixed to them, neither have they any other to contradict it. The decree whereby this temple was fininshed' having been granted by Dariur at his palace in Shushan (or Susa, as the Greeks call the place,) in remembranct hereof, the eastern gate," in the outer wall of the temple, was from this time called the gate of Shushan, and a picture and draught of that city was portrayed in sculpture over it, and there continued till the last destruction of that temple by the Romans. In the next month after the dedication, which was the month Nmsan, the first of the Jewish year, the temple being now made fit for all parts of the divine service, the passover was observed in it on the fourteenth day of that month,'' according to the law of God, and solemnized by all the children of Israel that were then returned from the captivity, with great joy and gladness of heart, because, saith the book of Ezra, "The Lord hath made them joyful, and turned the heart of the king of Assyria unto them, to strengthen their hands in the work of the house of God, the God of Israel:**" from whence Archbishop Usher infers,' that Babylon must necessarily have been reduced by Darius before diis time; for otherwise, he thinks, he could not have been here styled king of Assyria, Babylon being then the metropolis of that kingdom. 1 Ezra vi. 14—18. 2 Josopli. Aiitiq. lib. II. c. 5. Euseb. Demonst. Evansf. lib. 8. 3 In tho first of Esdras. v. 73, it is said, that the time of the stop which waa put to the building was twe years. 4 See Liffhtfoot on the Temple, c. X 5 E/ja vi. 19—22. 6 Ezra Tt SSL 7 Annales Veteiis Testamenti sub A. M. 3489. t82 CONNEXION OF ThE HISTORY OF And if we will add one stage more to the above mentioned, of the captivilj and restoration of Judah, and place the full completion of the captivity in the twenty-third of Nebuchadnezzar according to the Jewish account (which was the twenty-first according to the Babylonish,) when Nebuzaradan carried away the last remainder of the land;' and the full completion of the restoration at the finishing of the temple, and the restoration of the divine worship therein, this stao-e will have the like distance of seventy years: for the dedication of this temple, and the solemnizing of the first passover in it, being in the seventh year of Darius, it will fall in the seventieth year from the said twenty-third of Nebu- chadnezzar, according to Ptolemy's Canon.^ So that taking it which way you will, j;iu at what stage you please," the prophecy of Jeremiah will be fully and exactly accomphshed concerning this matter. And here ending the rebuilding of the second temple, I shall herewith end this book. BOOK IV. An. 614. Darius 8.] — The Samaritans, still carrying on their former spite ana rancour against the Jews, gave them new trouble on this occasion. The tribute of Samaria had been assigned first by Cyrus,^ and afterward by Darius," for the reparation of the temple at Jerusalem, and the furnishing of the Jews with sacrifices, that oblations and prayers might there daily be offered up for the king, and the royal family, and for the welfare and prosperity of the Persian empire.* This vtas ci matter of great regret and heart-burning to the San:iritans, and was in truti] the source and the true original reason of all the oppositions which they made against them: for they thought it an indignity upon them to be forced to pay their tribute to the Jews; and therefore, they did by bribes and other under- hand dealings," prevail with the ministers and other officers, to whose ,charge this matter belonged, during the latter pai't of the reign of Cyrus, and all the time of Cambyses, to put a stop to this assignment, and did all else that they could wholly to quash it, But the grant being again renewed by Darius,' and the execution of it so strictly enjoined in the manner as hath been before re- lated, the tribute was thenceforth annually paid, to the end for which it wa? assigned, without any more gainsaying, till this year. But now, on pretence tha* the temple was finished (though the out-buildings still remained unrepaired and were not finished till many years after,) they refuse! to let the Jews an> longer have the tribute;^ alleging, that it being assigned them for the repairing of their temple, now the temple was repaired, the end of that assignment wa^ ceased, and that consequently the payment of the said tribute was to cease with it, and for this reason would pay it no longer to them. Whereon tlie Jews, to right themselves in this matter, sent Zerubbabel the governor, with Morjlecai and Ananias, two other principal men among them, w'ith a complaint to Darius of the wrong that was done them, in the detaining of his royal bounty from them, contrary to the purport of the edict which he had in that behalf made. The king, on the hearing of the complaint, and the informing of himself about it, issued out his royal order to his officers at Samaria, strictly requiring and commanding them to take effectual care, that the Samaritans observe his edict in paying their tribute to the temple of Jerusalem, as formerly, and no more, on any pretence whatsoever, give the Jews any cause for the future to complain of their failure herein. And after this we hear no more of any opposition or contest concerning this matter till the time of SanbaUat, which was many years if'ter. i Jer. lii. 30. a That is, reckoning tlie twontythird year of Nebuchadnezzar, according to the Jewish account, to be tha iwenty-first according to the Babylonish account, which Ptnlemv went by. 3 .losejA. Antiq. lib. 11. c. 1. 4 Ibid. lib. 11. c. 4. 5 Ezra vi. 8—10. 6 Ibid. iv. 5. Joseph. Antiq. lib. 11. c. 2. 7 Ezra vi. 8 Joseph. Antiq. lib. 11. c. 4. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 183 From the lime of the reduction of Babylon, Darius,' had set himself to make great preparations for a war against the Scythians, that inhabited those countries which he between the Danube and the Tanais; his pretence for it was to be re- venged on them for their having invaded Asia, and held it in subjection to them twenty-eight years, as hath been before related. This was in the time of Cyaxares. the first of that name, king of Media, about a hundred and twenty years before But, for want of a better coloui for that whicii his ambition and thirst for con- quest only led him to, this was given out for the reason of the war. \_^n. 513. Darius 9.] — In order whereto, having drawn together an army of seven hundred thousand men, he marched with them to the Thracian Bosphorus, and having there passed over it on a bridge of boats, he brought all Thrace in subjection to him; and then marched to the Ister, or Danube, where he appointed his fleet to come to him (which consisted mostly of lonians, and other Grecian nations, dwelhng in the maritime parts of Asia, and on the Hellespont;) he there passed over another bridge of boats into the country of the Scythians, and having there, for three months' time, pursued them through several desert and uncultivated countries, where they drew him by their flight, on purpose to harass and destroy his army, he was glad at last to return with one half of them, having lost the other half in this unfortunate and ill-projected expedition. And had not the lonians, by the persuasion of Hestiseus, prince of Miletus (or tyrant, as the Grecians call him,) contrary to the opinion of others among them, stayed with the fleet to afford him a passage back, he and all the rest must have perished also. Mil- tiades, prince of the Thracian Chersonesus, which lies at the mouth of the Hel- lespont, being one of those who attended Darius with his ships, was earnest for their departure, and the first that moved it, telling them, that, by their going away, and leaving Darius and his army to perish on the other side of the Dan- ube, they had a fair opportunity of breaking the power of the Persians, and delivering themselves from the yoke of that tyranny which would be to the advantage of every one of their respective countries. This was urged by him in a council of the chief commanders; and would certainly have taken place, but that HestifEus, in answer hereto, soon made them sensible what a dangerous risk they were going to run: for he convinced them, that if this were done, the people of each of their cities, being freed from the fear of the Persians, would immediately rise upon them to recover their liberties; and this would end in the ruin of every one of them, who now, with sovereign authority, under the pro- tection of Darius, securely reigned over them. Which being the true state of their case, this argument prevailed with them; so that they all resolved to stay: and this gave Darius the means of again repassing the river into Thrace, where liaving left Megabyzus, one of his chief commanders, with part of his army, to finish his conquests in those parts, and thoroughly settle the country in his obedience, he repassed the Bosphorus with the rest, and retired to Sardis, where he stayed all the winter, and the most part of the ensuing year, to refresh his broken forces, and resettle his affairs in those parts of his empire, after the shock that had been given them by the baffle and loss which he had sustained in this ill-advised expedition. ^n. 512. Darius 10.] — Megabyzus, having reduced most of the nations of Thrace under the Persian yoke, returned to Sardis to Darius, and from thence accompanied him to Susa,- whither he marched back about the end of the year, after having appointed Artaphernes, one of his brothers, governor of Sardis, and Otanes chief commander of Thrace, and the maritime parts adjoining, in the place of Megal)yzus. This Otanes was the son of Sisamnes, one of the royal "'udges of Persia, who having been convicted of bribery and corruption by Cambyses, there is related this remarkable instance of that king's justice toward h'm; that he caused him to be flayed alive, ^ and making with his skin a cover- ing for the seat of the tribunal, made this his son, whom he appointed to suc- 1 Herodotus, lib. 4. Justin. lib. 2. c. 5. Cornolius Nepos in Miltiade. 2 Herodotus, lib. J, i Ibid. Vclarius Maximus, lib. 6. c. 3. Ammianus Marcellinus, lib. 24. 184 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF ceed him in this office, to sit thereon, that being thus put in mind of his father's punishment, he might thereby be admonished to avoid his cnme. An. 510. Darius 12.] — The Scythians, to be revenged on Darius for his in- vading their country, passed over the Danube,^ and ravaged all those parts of Thrace that had submitted to the Persians, as far as the Hellespont: whereon Miltiades, to avoid their rage, fled from the Chersonesus; but, on the veti-eat of the enemy, he returned, and was again reinstated in his former power by the inhabitants of the country. Jin. 509. Darius 13.] — About this time Darius, being desirous to enlarge his dominions eastward, in order to the conquering of those countries, laid a design of first making a discovery of them; for which purpose having built a fleet of ships at Caspatyrus,^ a city on the River Indus, and as far up upon it as the borders of Scythia, he gave the command of it to Scylax, a Grecian of Caryandia, a city in Caria, and one well skilled in maritime affairs, and sent him down the river, to make the best discoveries he could of all the parts which lay on the banks of it on either side; ordering him, for this end, to sail down the current, till he should arrive at the mouth of the river, and that then, passing through it into the southern ocean, he should shape his course westward, and that way return home. Which orders he having exactly executed, he returned by the Straits of Babelmandel and the Red Sea, and on the thirtieth month after his first setting out from Caspatyrus, landed in Egypt, at the same place from whence Necho king of Egypt formerly sent out his Phoenicians to sail round the coasts of Africa, which it is most likely was the port where now the town of Suez stands, at the hither end of the said Red Sea. And from thence he went to Susa, and there gave Darius an account of all the discoveries which he had made. After this Darius entered India with an army, and brought aU that large country under him, and made it the twentieth prefecture of his empire;' from whence he annually received a tribute of three hundred and sixty talents of gold, according to the number of the days of the then Persian year, appointing a talent to be paid him for every day in it. This payment was made him acccording to the standard of the Euboic talent, which was near the same with the Attic; and therefore, according to the lowest computation, it amounted to the value of one million and ninety-five thousand pounds of our money.* An. 504. Darius 18.] — A sedition happening in Naxus,* the chief island of the Cyclades in the Egean Sea, now called the Archipelago, and the better sort being therein overpowered by the greater number, many of the wealthiest of the inhabitants were expelled the island, and driven into banishment; whereon retiring to Miletus, they there begged the assistance of Aristagoras, for the restoring of them again to their country. This Aristagoras then go- verned that city as deputy to Hesticeus, whose nephew and son-in-law he was, Hestiseus being then absent at Susa in Persia: for Darius on his return to Sar- dis, after his unfortunate expedition against the Scythians, being thoroughly informed, that he owed the safety of himself and all his army to Hestiseus, in that he persuaded the lonians not to desert him at the Danube, sent for him to come to him, and having acknowledged his service, bid him ask his reward. Whereon he desired of him the Edonian Myrcinus, a territory on the River Strymon in Thrace, in order to build a city there: and, having obtained his request, immediately on his return to Miletus, he equipped a fleet, and sailed for Thrace, and, having there taken possession of the territory granted him. did forthwith set himself on the enterprise of building his intended city in the place projected. Megabyzus, being then governor of Thrace for Darius, soon saw what danger this might create to the king's affairs, in those parts: for he considered that the new-built city stood upon a navigable river; that the coun- try thereabout afforded abundance of timber for the building of ships; that it t ireroiiotui. Ill), t!. U Herodotus, lib. 4. 3 Ibid. lib, 3. 4 For, according to tlie lowest valuation, an Attic talent of gold amounts to three thousand pounds of our mnnev. 5 Plerodotus, lib. 5. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 185 was inhabited by several nations, both of Greeks and Barbarians, which could furnish a great multitude of men fit for military service, both by sea and land; that, if these should get such a crafty and enterprising person as Hestiaius at the head of them, they might soon grow to a power, both by sea and land, too hard for the king to master; and that especially since, from their silver and gold mines, of which there were many in that country, they might be furnished with means enough to carry on any enterprise they should undertake. All this, on his return to Sardis, he represented unto the king, who being thereby made fully sensible of the error he had committed, for the remedying of it sent a messenger to Myrcinus to call Hesticeus to Sardis to him, under pre- tpuce that having great matters in design, he wanted his counsel and advice concerning them; by Avhich means, having gotten him into his power, he ear- ned him with him to Susa, pretending, that he needed such an able counsel- lor and so faithful a friend to be always about him, to advise with on all occa- sions that might happen: and that he would make him so far a partaker of his fortunes by his royal bounty to him in Persia, that he should have no reason any more to think either of Myrcinus or Miletus. Hestiaius, hereon seeing himself under a necessity of obeying, accompanied Darius to Susa, and ap- pointed Aristagoras to govern at Miletus in his absence, and to him the ban- ished Naxians applied for relief. As soon as Aristagoras understood from them their case, he entertained a design of improving this opportunity to the making of himself master of Naxus, and therefore readily promised them all the re- lief and assistance which they desired; but, not being strong enough of him- self to accomplish what he intended, he went to Sardis, and communicated the. matter to Artaphernes, telling him, that this was an opportunity offered for the putting of a rich and fertile island into the king's hands; that, if he had that, all the rest of the Cyclades would of course fall under his power also; and that then Eubcea, an island as big as Cyprus, lying next, would be an easy conquest; from whence he would have an open passage into Greece, for the bringing of all that country under his obedience; and that one hundred ships would be sufficient to accomplish this enterprise. Artaphernes, on the hearing of the proposal, was so much pleased with it, that instead of the hun- dred ships, which Aristagoras demanded, he pj-omised him two hundred, pro- vided the king liked hereof: and, accordingly, on his writing to him [Jl?i. 503. Darhcs 19,] having received his answer of approbation, he sent him the next spring, to Miletus, the number of ships which he had promised, under the command of Megabates, a noble Persian of Achsemenian, or royal family. But his commission being to obey the orders of Aristagoras, and the haughty Per- sian not brooking to be under the command of an Ionian, this created a dis- sension between the two generals, which was carried on so far, that Megabates, to be revenged on Aristagoras, betrayed the design to the Naxians: whereon they provided so fully for their defence, that, after the Persians had, in the siege of the chief city of the island, spent four months and all their provisions, they were forced to retire, for want wherewith there any longer to subsist, and so the whole plot miscarried; the blame whereof being, by Megabates, all laid upon Aristagoras, and the false accusations of the one being more favourably heard than the just defence of the other, Artaphernes charged on him all the expenses of the expedition: and, it was given him to understand, that they would he exacted of him to the utmost penny, which being more than he was able to pay, he foresaw that this must end not only in the loss of his govern- ment, but also in his utter ruin; and therefore, being driven into extremities by the desperateness of his case, he entertained thoughts of rebelling against the king, as the only way left him for the extricating of himself out of^ this difficulty; and while he had this under consideration, came a message to him from Hestiaius, which advised the same thing: for Ilestifpus, after several years' continuance at the Persian court, being weary of their manners, and ex- ceeding desirous of being again in his own country, sent this advice unto Vol. I.— 24 186 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Aristagoras, as the likeliest means to accomplish his aim therein; for he concluded, that if there were any combustions raised in Ionia, he should easily prevail with Darius to send him thither to appease them, as it ac^ cordingly came to pass. Aristagoras therefore, finding his own inclinatrxtj Dacked with the order of Hestiaeus, communicated the matter to the chiei of the lonians, and finding them all ready to join with him in what he proposed, he fixed his resolutions for a revolt, and immediately set himself to make all manner of preparations to put them in execution. The Tyrians, after the taking of their city by Nebuchadnezzar, having been ••educed to a state of servitude, continued under the pressure of it full seventy years: but, these being now expired, they were again,' according to the pro- phecy of Isaiah, restored to their former privileges, and were allowed to have a king again of their own; and accordingly had so till the time of Alexander. This favour seems to have been granted them by Darius, in consideration of their usefulness to him in his naval wars, and especially at this time, when he needed them and their shipping so much for the reducing of the lonians again to their obedience to him. Hereon they soon recovered their former prosperity, and by the means of their traffic, whereby they had made their city the chief mart of all the east, they soon grew to that greatness, both of power and riches, as enabled them, on Alexander's invading the east, to make a greater stand against him than all the Persian empire besides; for they stopped the progress of his whole army full seven months before they could be reduced, as will be hereafter shown. This grant was made them, by Darius in the nineteenth year of his reign. Jl7i. 50-2. Darius 20.] — The next year after, Aristagoras, to engage the lonians the more firmly to stick to him, restored to them all their liberties:'- for, begin- ning first with himself at Miletus, he there abolished his own authority, and re- instated the peoiile in the government; and then going round Ionia, forced all the other tyrants (as the Greeks then called them) in every city to do the same; by which, having united them into one common league, and gotten himself to be made the head of it, he openly declared his revolt from the king, and armed both by sea and land to make war against him. This was done in the twentieth year of the reign of Darius. ^dn. 501. Darius 21.] — Aristagoras, to strengthen himself the more against the Persians in this war, which he had begun against them, went in the beginning of the followmg year to Lacedemon,^ to engage that city in his interest, and gain their assistance. But being there rejected, he came to Athens, where he had a much more favourable reception: for he had the good fortune to come ihither at a time when he found the Athenians in a thorough disposition to close with any proposal against the Persians that should be offered to them, they being then in the highest degree exasperated against them on this occasion: Hippias, the son of Pisistratus, tyrant of Athens, having been exj^elled thence about ten years before, after he had in vain tried several other ways for his restoration, at length applied himself to Artaphernes at Sardis; and having there insinuated himself a great way into his favour, was well heard in all that he had to say against the Athenians, and he spared not to do all that he could to set Arta- phernes against them; which the Athenians having advice of, sent an embassy to Sardis, to make friendship with Artaphernes, and to desire him not to give ear to their exiles against them. The answer which Artaphernes gave them was, that they must receive Hippias again, if they would be safe. Which haughty message being brought back to Athens, did set the whole city in a rage against the Persians; and in this juncture Aristagoras coming thither, easily ob- tained from them all that he desired; and accordingly they ordered a fleet of twenty ships for his assistance. Jin. 500. Darius 22.] — In the third year of the war, the lonians having got- ten all their forces together," and being assisted with twenty ships from Athens, 7 (sa. xjciii. 15. 17. 2 Hcrudot. Iib.5, 3 Ibid. 4 Herodot. lib. a. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 187 and five from Eretria, a city in the island of Eubcea, they sailed to Ephesus; and, having there laid up their ships, resolved on an attempt upon Sardis; and accordingly marched thither and took the place. But Sardis, being built most of cane, and their houses being therefore very combustible, one of them being accidentally set on fire, did spread the flame to all the rest, and the whole city was burnt down, excepting only the castle; where Artaphernes retired, and de- fended himself But, after this accident, the Persians and Lydians gathering together for their defence, and other forces coming in to their assistance from the adjacent parts, the lonians saw it was time for them to retreat; and therefore marched back to their ships at Ephesus with all the speed they were able; but before they could reach the place, they were overtaken, fought with, and over- thrown with great slaughter. Whereon the Athenians, going on board their ships, hoisted their sails, and returned home, and would not after this be any farther concerned in this war, notwithstanding all the most earnest entreaties with which they were solicited to it by Aristagoras. However, their having^ engaged thus far, gave rise to that war between the Persians and the Greeks:' which being carried on for several generations after between these two nations, caused infinite calamities to both, and at last ended in the uttei destruction of the Persian empire; for Darius, on his hearing of the burning of Sardis, and the part which the Athenians had therein, from that time resolved on a war against Greece; and that he might be sure not to forget it, he caused one of his attcnd- ants every day, when he was set at dinner, to say aloud unto him three times, "Sir, remember the Athenians." In the burning of Sardis, it happened, that the temple of Cybele, the goddess of the country, took fire, and was consumed with the rest of the city; which afterwards served the Persians for a pretence to set on fire all the temples of the Grecians which came in their way, though in truth that proceeded from another cause, which shall be hereafter related. On the departure of the Athenians,- the rest of the confederate fleet sailed to the Hellespont and the Propontis, and reduced the Byzantines, and most of the other Grecian cities in those parts, under their power; and then, sailing back again, brought in the Carians to join with them in this war, and also the Cy- priots, who all (excepting the Amathusians) entered into the same confederacy against Darius, and revolted from him; which drawing upon him all the forces that the Persians had in Cilicia, and the other neighbouring provinces, and also a great fleet from Phoenicia, the lonians sailed thither to their assistance, and engaging the Phoenician fleet, gave them a great overthrow. But, at the same time, the Cypriots, being vanquished in a battle at land, and the head of that conspiracy slain in it, the lonians lost the whole fruit of their victory at sea, and were forced to return, without having at all benefited either themselves or their allies by it: for, after this defeat at land, the whole island was again re- duced; and, within three years after, the same persons whom they had now as- sisted came against them with their ships, in conjunction with the rest of the Persian fleet, to complete their utter destruction. An. 499. Darius 23.] — The next year after, being the twenty-third of Darius,* Daurises, Hymees, and Otanes, three Persian generals, and all sons-in-law of Darius by the marriage of his daughters, having divided the Persian forces be- tween them, marched three several ways to attack the revolters. Daurises with his army directed his course to the Hellespont; but, after having there reduced several of the revolted cities, on his hearing that the Carians had also joined the confederates, he left those parts, and marched with all his forces against them. Whereon Hymees, who was first sent to the Propontis, after having taken the city of Cyrus in Mysia, marched thence to supply liis place on the Hellespont, where there was much more need of him, and there reduced all the Ilian coast; but, falling sick at Troas, he there died the next year after. Artaphernes and Otanes, with the third army, resolving to strike at the very heart of the confederacy, fell into Ionia and /Eolia, where the chief of their Uerodot. lib. 5. Cornelius Nepos in Miltiade. 2 Herodot. lib. .'>. 3 Ibid. 188 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF strength la}', and took Clazomenae in Ionia, and Cyma in ^Eolia; which was such a blow to the whole confederacy, that Aristagoras hereon, despairing of his cause, resolved to leave Miletus, and shift elsewhere for his safety; and, therefore, getting together all that were wiUing to accompany him, he went on ship-board, and set sail for the River Strymon in Thrace, and there seized on the territory of Myrcinub, which Darius had formerly given to Hestiseus: but the next year after, while he besieged the city, he was there slain by the Thra- cians, and all his army cut in pieces. ^n. 498. Darius 24.] — In the twenty-fourth year of Darius,' Daurises having fallen into the country of the Carians, overthrew them in the two battles with a very great slaughter; but, in a third battle, being drawn into an ambush, he was slain, with several other eminent Persians, and his whole army cut off and destroyed. ^n. 497. Darius 25.] — Artaphernes, with Otanes, and the rest of the Per- sian generals, seeing that Miletus was the head and chief strength of the Io- nian confederacy, resolved to bend all their force against it,' reckoning that, if they could make themselves masters of this city, all the rest would fall of course. The lonians, being informed of this, agreed, in their general coun- cil, to bring no army into the field, but provide and strengthen Miletus as well as they could for a siege, and to draw all their forces to fight the Persians by sea; in which sort of fighting they thought themselves, by reason of their skiU in maritime affairs, most likely to prevail: in order whereto, they appointed Lada, a small island before Miletus, for their rendezvous; and thither they came, to the number of three hundred and fifty-three ships: at the sight of which, the Persians, though their fleet was double the number, fearing the event, came not to a battle with them, till they had, by their emmissaries sent among them, corrupted the major part to desert the cause; so that, when they came to engage, the Samians, Lesbians, and several others, hoisting their sails, and departing home, there were not above an hundred ships left to bear the whole brunt of the day; who, being soon overborne by the number of the ene- my, were almost all lost and destroyed. After this Miletus, being besieged both by sea and land, soon fell a prey into the hands of the vittors, who abso- lutely destroyed the place; Avhich happened in the sixth year after the revolt of Aristagoras. From Miletus the Persians marched into Caria, and having there taken some cities by force, and received others by voluntary submission, in a short time reduced all that country again under their former yoke. The Milesians who were saved from the sword in the taking of the city, being sent captives to Darius to Susa, he did them no farther harm, but sent them to in- habit the city of Ampha, which was situated at the mouth of the Tigris, where, in conjunction with the Euphrates, it falls into the Persian Gulf, not far from the place where now the city Balsora stands; and there they continued a Grecian colony for many ages after. Jin. 496. Darius 26.] — After the taking of Miletus, the Persian fleet, which mostly consisted of Phoenicians, Cypriots, and Egyptians, having wintered on their coasts thereabouts,^ the next year took in Samos, Chius, Lesbus, and the rest of the islands; and, while they were thus employed at sea, the armies at land fell on the cities of the continent; and having brought them all again under fteir power, they treated them as they had afore threatened, that is, they made all the beautifulest of their youths eunuchs, sent all their virgins into Persia, and burned all their cities, with their temples: into so grievous a calamity were they brought by this revolt, which the self-designs of one enterprising busy- headed man, Hestiaeus the Milesian, led them into; and he himself had a share in it: for this very year, being taken prisoner by the Persians, he was carried to Sardis, and there crucified, by the order of Artaphernes. He hastened his execution, without consulting Darius about it, lest his kindness for him migh* extend to the granting him his pardon, and thereby a dangerous enemy to the i Herodot. lib. 5. 2 Herodotus, lib. 6. 3 Ibid. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 189 Persians be again let loose to embarrass their affairs. And that it would have so happened as he conjectured, did afterward appear: for when his head was brouglit to Darius, he expressed great displeasure against the authors of his death, and caused his head to be honourably buried, as the remains of a man that had much merited from him. How he was the cause of the Ionian war, and what was his aim herein, hath been above related. On the breaking out of that revolt, and the burning of Sardis,' Darius understanding that Aristagoras the deputy of Hesticeus was at the head of it, doubted not but that Hestiaius himself was at the bottom of the whole contrivance, and therefore sent for him, and charged him with it; but he managed the matter so craftily with Da- rius, as to make him believe, not only that he was innocent, but that the whole cause of this revolt was, that he was not there to have hindered it: for he told him, that the matter appeared plainly to have been long a brewing; that they had waited only for his absence to put it into execution; that if he had continued at Miletus, it could never have happened; and, that the only way to restore his affairs in those parts was to send him thither to appease these combustions; which he promised not only to do, but to deliver Aristagoras into his hands, and make the great island of Sardinia to become tributary to him; swearing that, if he were sent on this voyage, he would not change his garments tiU all were effected that he had said. By which fair speech Darius being deceived, gave him per- mission to return into lonia.^ On his arrival at Sardis, his busy head set him at work to contrive a plot against the government there, and he had drawn seve- ral of the Persians into it: but, in some discourse which he had with Artaphernes, finding that h*^ was no stranger to the part which he had acted in the Ionian re- volt, he thought it not safe for him any longer to tarry at Sardis; and therefore, the next night after getting privately away, he fled to the sea-coast, and got over to the island of Chius. But the Chians, mistrusting that his coming thither was to act some part for the interest of Darius among them, seized on his person and put him in prison; but aftv^rward being satisfied how he was engaged to the con- trary, they set him again at liberty. Hereon he sent one whom he had confi- dence in with letters to Sardis, to those Persians whom he had corrupted while he was there; but the person whom he trusted deceiving him, delivered the let- ters to Artaphernes; whereby the plot being discovered, and all the persons con- cerned in it put to death, he failed of this design. But thinking still he could do great matters were he at the head of the Ionian league, in order to the gain- ing of this point, he got the Chians to convey him to Miletus. But the Mile- sians having had their liberty restored to them by Aristagoras, would by no means run the hazard of losing it again, by receiving him into the city: where- on endeavourmg in the night to enter by force, he was repulsed, and wounded, and thereby forced to return again to Chius. While he was there, being asked the reason why he so earnestly pressed Aristagoras to revolt, and thereby brought so great a calamity upon Ionia, he told them, it was because the king had re- solved to remove the lonians into Phcenicia, and to bring the Phoenicians into Ionia, and give them that country; which was wholly a fiction of his own de- vising; for Darius had never any such intention: but it very well served his purpose, first to excuse himself, and next to excite the lonians with the greater firmness and vigour to prosecute the war; which accordingly had its efl(;ct: for the lonians hearing that their country was to be taken from them, and given to the Phcenlcians, were exceedingly alarmed at it; and therefore resolved with the utmost 'jf their power to stand to their defence. However, Hestiaeus finding the Chians not any way inclined to trust him with any of their naval forces, as he desired of them, he passed over to the isle of Lesbus; and having there gained eight ships, he sailed with them to Byzantium, where making prize of all tlie ships that passed the Bosphorus, cither to or from the Euxine Sea, excepting only such as belonged to those who were confederated with him, he did there in a short time grow to a great power. But, on his hearing of the taking of Mi- 1 Herodotus, lib. 5. 2 Ibid. lib. Q. 190 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF ielus, he left the conduct of his affairs in those parts to a deputy, nnd sailed to Chius; and after some little opposition at his first landing, made himself master of the island, the Chians, by reason of the loss they had lately sustained in the sea-fight against the Persians at Lada, being too weak at that time to resist him. From thence he sailed with a great army of lonians and ^Eolians to Thasus, an island on the Thracian coast, and laid siege to the chief city of that island, but hearing that the Phoenician fleet, in the service of the Persians, was sailed to take in the islands on the Asian coast, he raised the siege, and sailed back to Lesbus with all his forces, to defend that place; from whence passing over into the continent which was opposite to it, to plunder the country, Harpagus, one of the Persian generals, who happened then to be there with a great army, fell upon him; and having routed his forces, and taken him prisoner, sent him to Sardis, where he met with the fate which I have mentioned. He was a man of the best head, and the most enteiprising genius of any of his age; but he having wholly employed those abilities to lay plots and designs, which pro- duced great mischiefs in the world, for the obtaining of little aims of his own, it happened to him as most, at the end, it doth to such refined politicians, who, while they are spinning fine webs of politics for the bringing about of their self-designs, often find them to become snares to their own destruction; for the providence of the wisest of men being too short to overreach the providence of God, he often permits such Ahitophels, for the punishment of their pre- sumption, as Avell as their malice, to perish by their oMm devices. And so it happened to Machiavel, the famous master of our modern politicians, who, after all his politics, died in jail for want of bread. And thus may it happen to all else, who make any other maxims than those of truth and justice to be the rules of their politics. An. 495. Darius 27.] — After the Phoenician fleet had subdued all the islands on the Asian coast, Artaphernes sent them to reduce the Hellespont,' that is, all its coast on the European side, for those on the Asian had been already brought under by the armies at land; which Miltiades, prince of the Thracian Chersone&us, having advice of, and that the fleet was come as far as Tenedos to put these orders in execution, he thought not fit to tarry their arrival, as being too weak to resist so great a power; but immediately carried all that he had on board five ships, and set sail with them for Athens. But, in his pas- sage, one of them, commanded by Metiochus his eldest son, Avas taken by the Phoenicians, and Metiochus was carried to Darius to Susa; but, instead of do- ing him any hurt, he generously gave him a house, and lands also for his main- tenance, and married him to a Persian lady, with whom he there lived in an honourable state all his life after, and never more returned into Greece. lo the interim, Miltiades with his other four ships got safe to Athens, and there again settled himself; for he was a citizen of that city, and one of the mopt honourable families in it. Miltiades, his father, Cimon's elder brother by the same mother, (for they had different fathers,) was the first of the Athenians that settled in the Thracian Chersonesus, being called thither by the Dolonces, the inhabitants of the country, to be their prince; who, dying without issue, left his principality to Stesagoras, his nephew, the eldest son of his brother Cimon; he dying also without children, the sons of Pisistratus, who then go- verned at Athens, sent this Miltiades' brother thither to succeed him; where he arrived, and settled himself in that year in which Darius entered on his war against the Scythians, in which expedition he accompanied him with his sliips to the Danube, as hath been above said. Three years after he was driven out by the Scythians; but being afterward brought back, and restored again by the Dolonces, ho continued there till this time, and then was finally dispossessed by the Phoenicians. While he lived in the Chersonesus, he married, for his p.econd wife, Hcgesipyla, the daughter of Olorus, a Thracian king in the neigh- bourhood, by whom he had Cimon, ° the famous general of the Athenians 1 Herodot. lib. (i. Cornelius Nepos in Miltiade. 2 Plutarchusin CimonR. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 191 After the death of Miltiacles, she had, by a second husband, a son, called also Olorus, by the name of his grandfather, who was the father of Thucydides, the historian. She could not have had them both by the same husband: for Cimon and Thucydides, and consequently Olorus, were of two different tribes, and therefore they could not be both descended from Miltiades. An. 494. Darius 28.] — Darius, recalHng all his other generals,' sent Mardo- nius, the son of Gobrias, a young Persian nobleman, who had lately married one of his daughters, to be the chief commander in all the maritime parts of Asia, with orders to invade Greece, and revenge him on the Athenians and Eretrlans for the burning of Sardis. On his arrival at the Hellespont, all his forces being there rendezvoused for the execution of these orders, he marched with his land forces through Thrace into Macedonia, ordering his fleet first to take in Thasus, and then follow after him, and coast it by sea, as he marched by land, that each might be at hand to act in concert with each other, for the prosecuting of the end proposed by this war. On his arrival in Macedonia, all that country, dreading so great a power, submitted to him. But the fleet after they had subdued Thasus, as they were passing farther on toward the coast of Macedonia, on their doubling of the cape of Mount Athos, now called Capo Santo, met there with a terrible storm, which destroyed three hundred of their ships, and above twenty thousand of their men. And at the same time Mar- donius fell into no less a misfortune by land: for lying with his army in an en- campment not sufficiently secured, the Thracians took the advantage of it, and, falling on him in the night, broke into his camp, and slew a great number of his men, and wounded Mardonius himself; by which losses being disabled for any farther action either by sea or land, he was forced to march back again into Asia, without gaining any honour or advantage, either to himself or the king's affairs, by this expedition. Jin. 493. Darius -29.] — Darius, before he would make any farther attempt upon the Grecians," to make trial which of them would submit to him and which would not, sent heralds to all their cities, to demand earth and water; which was the form whereby the Persians used to require the submission of those whom they would have yield to them. On the arrival of these heralds, several of the Grecian cities dreading the power of the Persians, did as was re- quired of them. But when those who were sent to Athens and Lacedemon came thither with this commission, they flung them, the one into a well, and the other into a deep pit, and bid them fetch earth and water thence. But this being done in the heat of their rage, they repented of it, when come to a cooler temper: for thus to put heralds to death, was a violation of the law of nations, for which they were afterward condemned even by themselves, as well as all their neighbours, and would gladly have made any satisfaction for the wrong that would have been accepted of; and the Lacedemonians sent a person of purpose to Susa to make an offer hereof. An. 492. Darius 30.] — Darius, on the hearing of the ill success of Mardo- nius, suspecting the sufficiency of his conduct,^ recalled him from his com- mand, and sent two other generals in his stead, to prosecute the war against the Grecians, Datis a Median, and Artaphernes a Persian, the son of that Ar- taphcrnes's brother, who was lately governor of Sardis, and gave them particu- larly in charge not to fail of executing his revenge on the Athenians and the Eretrians, whom he could never forgive for the part which they had in the burning of Sardis. On their arrival on the coast of Ionia, they there drew together an army of three hundred thousand men, and a fleet of six hundred ships, and made the best preparations they could for this expedition against the Grecians. An. 491. 2)ff/TO5 31.] — In the beginning of the next spring,"* the two Per- .■ Herodotus, lilt. 0. 2 Ibid. lib. 7. 3 Herodoiiis lib. G. Plutarchiis in Aristido. Cornelius Nepos in Miltiado. 4 Herodotus, lib. C. Plutarclms in Aristide et Themistocle. Cornelius Nepos in Miltiade. 192 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF siau generals having shipped their army, rendezvoused their whr Je fleet at Sa mos, and from thence sailed to Naxus; and having there burned the chief city of the island, and all their temples, and taken in all the other islands in those seas, they shaped their course directly for Eretria; and, after a siege of seven days, took the city by the treacheiy of some of its chief inhabitants, and burned it to the ground, making all that they found in it captives. And then, pass- ing over into Attica, they were led by the guidance of Hippias, the late tyrant of Athens, into the plain of Marathon; Avhere being met and fought with by ten thousand Athenians, and one thousand Plateans, under the leading of Mil- tiades, who was lately prince of the Thracian Chersonesus, they were there overthrown by this small number with a great slaughter, and forced to retreat to their ships, and sail back again into Asia with baffle and disgrace, having lost in this expedition,' saith Trogus, by the sword, shipwreck, and other ways, two hundred thousand men. But Herodotus tells us," they w^ere no more than six thousand four hundred that were slain in the field of battle; of which Hip- pias was one, who was the chief exciter and conductor of this war. Datis and Artaphernes, on their return into Asia,^ that they might show some fruit of this expedition, sent the Eretrians they had taken to Darius to Susa, who, without doing them any farther harm, sent them to dwell in a village of the region of Cissia, v/hich was at the distance of about a day's journey from Susa,* where Apollonius Tyaneus found their descendants still remaining a great many ages after. An. 490. Darius 32.] — Darius,^ on his hearing, of the unsuccessful return of his forces from Attica, instead of being discouraged by that or the other disasters that had happened unto him in his attempts upon the Grecians, added the defeat of Marathon to the burning of Sardis, as a new cause to excite him with the greater vigour to carry on the war against them. And, therefore, resolving in person to make an invasion upon them with a'' his power, he sent orders through aU the provinces to arm the whole empire for it. [Jin. 487. Darius 35.] — But after three years had been spent in making these preparations, a new war broke out in the fourth, by the revolt of the Egyptians. But Darius's heart was so earnestly set against the Grecians, that resolving his new rebels should not divert him from executing his wrath upon his old enemies, he determined to make war against them both at the same time; and that, while part of his forces were sent to reduce Egypt, he would in person with the rest fall upon Greece. But he being now an old man, and there being a controversy between two of his sons, to which of them two the succession did belong, it was thought con- venient that the matter should be determined before he did set out on this ex- pedition, lest otherwise, on his death, it might cause a civil war in the empire; for the preventing of which it was an ancient usage among the Persians, that, before their king went out to any dangerous war, his successor should be de- clared. The matter in dispute stood thus:" — Darius had three sons by his first wife, the daughter of Gobrias, all born before his advancement to the throne, and four others by Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, who were all born after it. Of the first Artabasanes (w^ho is by some called Artimenes, and by others Aria- menes) was the eldest, and of the latter Xerxes. Artabasanes urged that he was the eldest son; and therefore, according to the usage and custom of all nations, he ought to be preferred in the succession before the younger. To this Xerxes replied, that he was the son of Darius by Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, who was the first founder of the Persian empire; and therefore claimed in her right to succeed his father in it; and that it was much more agreeable to justice, that the crown of Cyrus should come to a descendant of Cyrus, than to one who was not. And he farther added, that it was true, Artabasanes was the eldest son of Darius; but that he was the eldest son of the king: for Artabasanes 1 Justin, lib. 2. c. 9. 2 Herodot. lib. 6. » 3 Herodot. lib. 6. 4 Phiiostratus, lib. I.e. 17. 5 Herodot. lib. 7. 6 Herodotus, lib. 7. Justin, lib. 2. c lO. Pljtarchus in ArtaxerxQ et in .^pophtbegin, ^tfi ^lyaJiy^iaf. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 193 was born while his flither was only a private person, and therefore by that primogeniture could claim no more than to be heir to his private fortunes: but as to him, he was the first-born after his father was king, and therefore had the best right to succeed him in the kingdom. And for this he had an instance from the Lacedemonians, with whom it was the usage, that the sons of their kings, who were born after their advancement to the throne, should succeed before those who were born before it. And this last argument he was helped to by Damaratus, formerly king of Lacedemon, w^ho having been unjustly de- posed by his subjects was then an exile in the Persian court. Hereupon Xerxes was declared the successor, though not so much by the strength of his plea, as by the influence which his mother Atossa had over the inclinations of Darius, who was absolutely governed in this matter by the authority she had with him. That which was most remarkable in this contest was, the friendly and amicable manner with which it was managed: for, during the whole time that it lasted, all the marks of a most entire fraternal affection passed between the two brothers: and, when it was decided, as the one did not insult, so neither did the other repine, or express any anger or discontent on the judgment given; and although the elder brother lost the cause, yet he cheerfully submitted to the deterrnination, wished his brother joy, and without diminishing his friendship or affection to him, ever after adhered to his interest, and at last died in his service, being slain fighting for him in the Grecian war; which is an example very rarely to be met with, where so great a prize is at stake as that of a crown; the ambitious desire of which is usually of that force with the most of mankind, as to make them break through all other considerations whatsoever, where there is any the least pretence to it, to reach the attainment. Aa. 486. Darius 36.] — After the succession was thus settled, and all were ready to set out both for the Egyptian as well as the Grecian war,' Darius fell sick and died, in the second year after the Egyptian revolt, having then reigned* thirty-six years; and Xerxes, according to the late determination, quietly suc- ceeded in the throne. There are writers'' who place this determination after the death of Darius, and say, that it was settled by the judgment of Artabanus, uncle to the two contending princes, who was made the arbitrator between them in this contest. But Herodotus, who lived the nearest those times of all that have written of it, positively tells us, that it was decided by Darius himself a little before his death. And his decision being that which was most likely to have the greatest authority in this matter, Herodotus's account of it seemeth the much more probable of the two. Darius was a prince of wisdom, clemency, and justice, and hath the honour^ to have his name recorded in holy writ, for a favourer of God's people, a re- storer of his temple at Jerusalem, and a promoter of his worship therein; for all which, God was pleased to make him his instrument: and in respect hereof, I doubt not, it was, that he blessed him with a numerous issue, a long reign, and great prosperity; for although he were not altogether so fortunate in his wars against the Scythians and the Grecians, yet every where else he had full success in all his undertakings, and not only restored and thoroughly settled the empire of Cyrus, after it had been much shaken by Cambyses and the Magian, but also'^ added many large and rich provinces to it, especially those of India, Thrace, Macedon, and the isles of the Ionian Sea. The Jews* have a tradition, that in the last year of Darius died the prophets Haggai, Zcchariah, and Malachi; and that thereon ceased the spirit of prophecy from among the children of Israel; and that this was the obsignation or sealing up of vision and prophecy" spoken of by the prophet Daniel. And from the same tradition they tell us, that the kingdom of the Persians ceased also the 1 Ilerndot. lib. 7. 3 Ptolm. in Canone, Africanus, Eusel). &c 3 Justin, lib. 2. c. 10. I'lntarclms ^^tfi ciyxHiyciy-c. 4 rz/.ra V. and in tlir" prophecies of Flaccai ami Zechariah. 5 Abraham Zacutiis in Juchasin. David Ganr in Zemach David. Seder Clam Znta, &c. 6 Dan. ix. 24 • Vol. L— 25 194 CXJJVNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF same year; for they "will have it, that this was the Darius whon Alexander conquered, and that the whole continuance of the Persian empire was only fifty-two years; which they reckon thus: — Darius the Median reigned one year, Cyrus three years, Cambyses (who they say was the Ahasuerus who married Esther) sixteen years, and Darius (whom they will have to be the sot of Es- ther) thirty-two years. And this last Darius, according to them, was the Ar- taxerxes who sent Ezra and Nehemiah to Jerusalem to restore the stat*^ of the Jews; for they tell us, that Artaxerxes, among the Persians, was the common, name of their kings, as that of Pharaoh was among the Egyptians. This shows how ill they have been acquainted with the affairs of the Persian empire. And their countryman Josephus, in the account which he gives of those times, eeems to have been but very little better informed concerning them. In the time of his reign first appeared in Persia the famous prophet of the Magians, whom the Persians call Zerdusht, or Zaratush, and the Greeks, Zo- roastres. The Greek and Latin writers much differ about ^im: some of them* will have it, that he lived many ages before, and was king of Bactria; and others that there were* two of that name, who lived in different ages, one long before the other, both famous in the same kind. But the oriental Avriters, who should best know,^ all unanimously agree, that there was but one Zerdusht or Zoroastres; and that the time in which he flourished, was while Darius Hys- taspes was king of Persia. It is certain he was no king, but one born of m.ean and obscure parentage, who did raise himself wholly by his craft in carrying on that imposture with which he deceived the world. They who place him so high as the time of Ninus, by whom they say he was slain in battle, follow the authority of Justin for it. But Diodorus Siculus,"* out of Ctesias, tells us, that the king of Bactria, with whom Ninus had war, was called Oxyartes" and there are some ancient manuscripts of Justin" in which it is read Oxyatres, and perchance that was the genuine reading, and Zoroastres came into the text instead of it, by the error of the copier, led thereto perchance by a note in the margin placed there by some critic, who, from the character of the per- son, took upon him to alter the name; for he is there said, Artes Magicas pi-imo invenisse, i. e. That he loas the first inventor of Magianism; which Zoroastres only was generally taken to be, though in truth he was not the founder of that .sect, but only the restorer and reformer of it, as shall be hereafter shown. •He was the greatest impostor, except Mahomet, that ever appeared in the world, and had all the craft and enterprising boldness of that Arab, but much more knowledge; for he was excellently skilled in all the learning of the east that was in his time; whereas the other could neither write nor read; and par- ticularly he was thoroughly versed in the Jewish religion, and in all the sacred writings of the Old Testament that were then extant, which makes it most likely that he was as to his origin a Jew. And it is generally said of him, that he had been a servant to one of the prophets of Israel, and that it was by this means that he came to be so well skilled in the holy scriptures, and all other Jewish knowledge; which is a farther proof that he was of that people; it not being likely that a proj^het of Israel should entertain him as a servant, or in- struct him as a disciple, if he were not of the same seed of Israel, as well as of the same religion with him; and that especially since it was the usage of that people, by principle of religion, as well as by long received custom among them, to separate themselves from all other nations, as far as they were able. And it is farther to be taken notice of, that most of those who speak of his original," say, that he was of Palestine, within which country the land of Judea was. And all this put together, amounts with me to a convincing proof, that 1 Justin, lib. 1. c. I. Diog. Laertius in Prooemio, Plin. lib. 30. c. 1. •• 2 Plin. lib. 30. c. I. Soe Stanley on the Chaldaic Philosophy, c. 2. 3 Abiilraragiiis, Ifhinael Abiilfuda, Sharestani, &c. Vide etiam Agathiam, lib. 2. et Thomam Hyde de Re ligione Veler'ira Persarum, c. 24. < Lib. 2. p. 94. 5 So saith Ligerius. C Religio Veterum Persarum per Thomam Hyde, c. 24. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 195 he was first a Jew, and that by birth, as well as religion, before he took upon him to be prophet of the Magian sect. The prophet of Israel to whom he was a servant, some' say, was Elias, and others Ezra:" but as the former was too early, so the other was too late for the time in which he lived. With this best agreeth what is said by a third sort of wri ers,' that it was one of the disciples of Jeremiah with whom he served; and if so, it must have been cither Ezekiel or Daniel; for besides these two there was no other prophet of Israel in those times who could have been of the dis ciples ui Jeremiah. And as Daniel was of age sufficient at his carrying away to baby Ion (he having been then about eighteen ye^rs old) to have been some time before under the discipline and tutorage of the prophet, so, having con- tinued till about the end of the reign of Cyrus, he lived long enough to have been contemporary with this impostor; which cannot be said of Ezekiel: for we hear nothing more of him after the twenty-seventh year of the captivity of Jehoiachin, which was the year next after the taking of Tyre by Nebuchad- nezzar; and therefore it is most likely that he lived not much beyond that time. It must therefore be Daniel under whom this impostor served; and be- sides him there was not any other master in those times, under whom he could acquire all that knowledge, both in things sacred and profane, which he was so well furnished with. And, no doubt, his seeing that great, good, and wise man arrive at such a height and dignity in the empire, by being a true prophet of God, was that which did set this crafty wretch upon the design of being a false one; hoping that, by acting this part well, he might obtain the same advancement, and by pretending to that which the other really was, arrive to the like honour and greatness; and it must be said that, by his craft and dexterity in managing this pretence, he wonderfully succeeded in what he aimed at. It is said, that, while he served the prophet under whom he was bred, he did by some evil action"* draw on him his curse, and that thereon he was smitten with leprosy. But they who tell us this, seem to be such who finding Eliah said to be his master, mistook Elisha for Eliah, and therefore thought Gehazi to have been the person. He did not found a new religion, as his successor in imposture Mahomet did, but^ only took upon him to revive and reform an old one, that of the Magians, which had been for many ages past the national religion of the Medes, as well as of the Persians; for it having fallen under disgrace on the death of those ringleaders of that sect, who had usurped the sovereignty after the death of Cambyses, and the slaughter which was then made of all the chief men among them, it sunk so low, that it became almost extinct, and Sabianism every where prevailed against it, Darius and most of his followers on that occasion going over to it. But the affection which the people had foi the religion of their forefathers, and which they had been all brought up in, not being easily to be rooted out, Zoroastres saw that the revival of this was the best game of imposture that he could then play; and, having so good an old stock to graft upon, he did with the greater case make all his new scions to grow which he inserted into it. He first made his appearance in Media,'' now called Aderbijan, in the city of Xiz, say some; in that of Ecbatana, now Tauris, say others; for Smerdis having been of that province, it is most likely that the sect which he was of had still there its best rooting; and therefore the impostor thought he might in those parts, with the best success, attempt the revival of it. And his first appearing here is that which I suppose hath given some the handle to assert, that this was the country in which he was born. 1 AbiilfaraEius, p. 54. 2 Abri Mohamnu'd Mustnphu, lUstoricus Arab. Relisrio Veteriim Persariim, c. 24. p. 313. 3 Bmulnri ex Abii Japliar Tabarila Ilistorico Arahe. Reli?. Vet. Pers. c. 24. p. 314. 4 Miffiili Porsa. Buiidari. Abu Mohammed Miistapha. Roligio Vet. Pers. c. 24. p. U3— 115. 5 Vide Pocockii SpeciiiH'ti llistoria: Arabica;, p. 147 — 149. et Thomam Hyde de Relisione Vetcrum Persariuk. 6 Biindari. Abu Japliar Tabarita. Religio Vet. Pers. c. 24. Golii Notxin Alfraganum p. 207.etSH7 £96 CONNEXION OF fHE HISTORY OF The chief reformation which he made in the Magican religion' was in the first principle of it: for whereas before they had held the being of two first causes, the first light, or the good god, who was the author of all good; and the other darkness, or the evil god, who was the author of all evil: and that of the mixture of these two, as they were in a continual struggle with each other, all things were made; he introduced a principle superior to them both, one supreme God. who created light and darkness, and out of these two, according to the alone pleasure of his own will, made all things else that are, according to what is said in Isaiah xlv. 5 — 7. "I am the Lord, and there is none else; there is no God besides me; I gifded thee, though thou hast not known me, that they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside me. I am the Lord, and there is none else. I form the light and create darkness, I make peace and create evil, I the Lord do all these things." For these words being directed to Cyrus, king of Persia, must be understood as spoken in reference to the Persian sect of the Magians, who then held light and darkness, or good and evil, to be the supreme beings, without acknowledg- ing the great God who is superior to both. And I doubt not it was from hence that Zoroastres had the hint of mending this great absurdity in their theology. But to avoid making God the author of evil, his doctine was^ that God origi- nally and directly created only light or good, and that darkness or evil followed it by cousequence, as the shadow doth the person; that light or good had only a real production from God, and the other afterward resulted from it, as the defect thereof. In sum, his doctrine as to this particular was,^ that there was one supreme Being, independent and self-existing from all eternity. That^ under him there were two angels, one the angel of light, who is the author and director of all good; and the other the angel of darkness, who is the author and director of all evil; and that these two, out of the mixture of light and darkness, made all things that are; that they are in a perpetual struggle with each other; and that where the angel of light prevails, there the most is good, and where the angel of darkness prevails, there the most is evil; that this struggle shall continue to the end of the world; that* then there shall be a general resurrec- tion, and^ a day of judgment, wherein just retribution shall be rendered to aU according to their works; after which' the angel of darkness, and his disciples, shall go into a world of their ow^n, where they shall suffer in everlasting dark- ness the punishments of their evil deeds; and the angel of light, and his dis- ciples, shall also go into a world of their own, where they shall receive in everlasting light the reward due unto their good deeds; and that after this they shall remain separated for ever, and light and darkness be no more mixed to- gether to all eternity. And alP this the remainder of that sect, which is now m Persia and India, do, without any variation, after so many ages, still hold even to this lay. And how consonant this is to truth, is plain enough to be understood without a comment. And whereas he taught, that God originally created the good angel only, and that the other followed only by the defect of good; this plainly shows that he was not unacquainted with the revolt of the fallen angels, and the entrance of evil into the world that way, but had been thoroughly instructed how that God at first created his angels good, as he also did man, and that they that are now evil became such wholly through their own fault, in falling from that state which God first placed them in. All which plainly shows the author of this doctrine to have been well versed in the sacred writings of the Jewish religion, out of which it manifestly appears to have been aJJi taken; only the crafty impostor took care to dress it up in such a style and 1 Abulfeda. Ebn Shahna. Pocockii Specimen Historia; Arab. p. 147, 148. Religio Vet. Pers. c. 9. p. 163, el c. 22. p. 299. 2 Shahristani. Relijrio Vi t. Persarum, c. 22. p. 299. 3 Abiilfcda. Shahristani. Relig. Vet. Pers.c. 22. 4 Religio. Vet. Pers. c. 9. p. IfiS. Pocockii Specimen HistoriaB ArabicK, p. 148. 5 Diogenes Laeritus in Prooeniio. Plutarchus in Iside el Osiride. Shahristani. Relig. Vet. Pers. c. 22. p. 296 6 Relig. Vet. Pers. c. 33. 7 Shahristani. Plutarchiis de Iside et Osiride. Religio Vet. Pers. p. 299. 395, &c. 8 Eelig. Vet. Pers. c. 22. p. 292, 293. Ovingion's Travels. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 1^ form, as would make it best agree with that old religion of the Medes and Persians which he grafted it upon. Another reformation which he made in the Magian religion, was,' that he caused fire-temples to be built wherever he came: for whereas hitherto they had erected their altars, on which their sacred fire was kept, on the tops of hills and on high places in the open air, and there performed all the offices of their religious worship, where, often by rain, tempests, and storms, the sacied fire was extinguished, and the holy offices of their religion interrupted and dis- turbed; for the preventing of this he directed, that wherever any of those altars were erected, temples should be built over them, that so the sacred fires might be the better preserved, and the public offices of their religion the better per- formed before them: for ail the parts of their public worship were performed before these public sacred fires, as all their private devotions were before pri- vate fires in their own houses; not that they worshipped the fire (for this they always disowned,) but God in the fire. For Zoroastres," among his other impos- tures, having feigned that he was taken up into heaven, there to be instructed in those doctrines, which he was to deliver unto men, he pretended not (as Ma- homet after did) there to have seen God, but only to have heard him speaking to him out of the midst of a great and most bright flame of fire; and therefore taught his followers, that fire was the truest Shechinah of the divine presence; that the sun, being the perfectest fire, God hack there the throne" of his glory, ^ and the residence of his divine presence, in a more excellent manner than any where else, and next that in the elementary fire with us; and for this reason he ordered them still to direct all their worship to God, first toward the sun (which they call Mithra,) and next toward their sacred fires, as being the things in which God chiefly dwelt; and their ordinary way of worship was to do so toward both: for when they came before these fires to worship, they ilways approached them on the west side, that, having their faces toward them, and also toward the rising sun at the same time, they might direct their worship toward both; and in this posture they always performed every act of their worship. But this was not a new institution of his: for thus to worship before fire and the sun, was, as hath been said, the ancient usage of that sect; and according hereto is it, that we are to understand what we find in Ezekiel viii. 16, where it is related, that the prophet being carried in a vision to Jeru- salem, to see the abominations of that place, among other impieties, had there shown him "about five-and-twenty men standing between the porch and the altar, with their backs toward the temple of the Lord, and their faces toward the east, and they worshipped the sun." The meaning of which is, that they had turned their backs upon the true worship of God, and had gone over to that of the Magians. For the holy of holies (in which was the Shechinah of the divine presence resting over the mercy-seat,) being on the western end of the temple at Jerusalem, all that entered thither to worship God did it with theii faces turned that, way: for that was their kebla,'' or the point toward which they always directed their worship. But the kebla of the Magians being the rising sun, they always worshipped with their faces turned that way, that is, toward the east. And, therefore, these twenty-five men, by altering their kebla, are shown to have altered their religion, and instead of worshipping God, accord- ing to the Jewish religion, to have gone over to the religion and worship of the Magians. Zoroastres having thus retained, in his reformation of Magianism, the an- cient usage of that sect in worshipping God before fire, to give the sacred fires in the temples which he had erected the greater veneration, he pretended, that when he was in heaven, and there heard God speaking to him out of the midst 1 Roliuio Vet. Pers. c. 1. p. 8. et 29. 2 i|)id. c. 8. p. 160. 3 Sanson in the presont State of I'ersia, p. 185. Religio Vet. Pers. c. 4. 4 Kebla, among the eastern nations, slgnifieth the point of the heavens toward which they directed theii worship. The Jews did it toward the temple at Jerusaism, the Mahometans toward Mecca, the Sabines to ]pard the meridian, and the Magians toward tbe rising sun. 198 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF of lire, he' brought thence some of that fire Avith him on his return, and placed it on the altar of the first fire-temple that he erected (which was that at Xiz' in Media,) from whence they say it was propagated to all the rest. And this is the region which is given for their so careful keeping of it: for their priests watch it day and night,^ and never suffer it to go out, or be extinguished.' And for the same reason also they did treat it with that superstition, that they fed it only with wood stripped of its bark,* and of that sort wh'ch they thought most ^lean; and they never did blow it,* either with bellows or with the'i breath, for fear of polluting it; and to do this either of those ways, or to casi any unclean thing into it, was no less than death by the law of the land, as long as those of that sect reigned in it, which, from the time of Zoroastres to the death of Yazdejerd, the last Persian king of the Magian religion, was about one thousand one hundred and fifty years; yea, it went so far, that the priests themselves never approached this fire but with a cloth over their mouths, '' that they might not breathe thereon; and this they did, not only when they tended the fire to lay more wood thereon, or do any other service about it, but also when they approached it to read the daily offices of their liturgy before it: so that they mumbled over their prayers rather than spoke them, in the same manner as the popish priests do their masses, without letting the people pre- sent articulately hear one word of what they said; and if they should hear them, they would now as badly understand them; for all their public prayers are, even to this day, in the old Persian language, in which Zoroastres first composed them, above two thousand two hundred years since, of which the common people do not now understand one word: and in this absurdity also have they the Romanists partakers with them. When Zoroastres composed his liturgy, the old Persic was then indeed the vulgar language of all those countries where this liturgy was used: and so was the Latin throughout all the western empire, when the Latin service was first used therein. But w'hen the language changed, they would not consider, that the change Avhich was made thereby, in the reason of the thing, did require that a change should be made in theii liturgy also, but retained it the same, after it ceased to be understood, as it was before. So it was the superstitious folly of adhering to old establishments against reason that produced this absurdit}^ in both of them: though, it must be acknowledged, that the Maglans have more to say for themselves in this mat- ter than the Romanists; for they are taught, that their liturgy was brought them from heaven, which the others do not believe of theirs, though they stick to it as if it were. And if that stiffness of humour, which is now among too many of us, against altering any thing in our liturgy, should continue, it must at last bring us to the same pass: for all languages being in fluxu, they do in every age alter from what they were in the former; and therefore, as we do not now understand the English which was here spoken by our ancestors three or four hundred years ago, so in all likelihood will not our posterity three or four hun- dred years hence understand that which is now spoken by us. And therefore, should our liturgy be still continued, without any change or alteration, it will then be as much in an unknown language as now the Roman service is to the vulgar of that communion. But, to return to the reformations of Zoroastres. How much he followed the Jewish platform in the framing of them, doth manifestly appear from the particulars J have mentioned; for most of them w^ere taken, either from the sa- cred writings, or the sacred usages of that people. Moses heard God speaking to him out of a. flame of fire from the bush, and all Israel heard him speaking to them in the same manner out of the midst of fire from Mount Sinai; hence Zoroastres pretended to have heard God speaking to him also out of the mids* 1 Religio Vet. Pers. c. 8. p. 160. 2 Golii Notae ad Alfraganum, p. 227. 3 Strabo, lib. 15. Ammianus Marcellinus, lib. 23. Agathias, lib. 2. 4 Religio Vol. Pers. c. 28. p. 351. et c. 29. p. 355. 5 Strabo, lib. 15. Religio Vet. Pers. c.28.p.351.etc.29.p.355. 6 Strabo, p. 732. Religio Vet. Pers. c. 30. THE Ol^D AND NEW TESTAMENT. 199 of a flame of fire. The Jews) had a visible Shechinah of the divine presence among them resting over the mercy-seat in the holy of holies, both in their ta- bernacle and temple, toward which they offered up all their prayers; and there- fore Zoroastres taught his Magians to pretend to the like, and to hold the sun, and the sacred fires in their fire-temples, to be this Shechinah in which God es- pecially dwelt; and for this reason they offered up all their prayers to him with their faces turned toward both. The Jews had a sacred fire which came down from heaven upon their alter of burnt-offerings, which they did there ever after, till the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, inextinguishably maintain: and w^ith this fire only were all their sacrifices and oblations made, and Nadab and Abihu were punished with death for offering incense to God with other fire. And in like manner Zoroastres pretended to have brought his holy fire from heaven; and therefore commanded it to be kept with the same care. And to kindle fire on the altar of any new-erected fire-temple, or to rekindle it on any such altar, Avhere it had been by any unavoidable accident extinguished, from any other fire, than from one of the sacred fires in some other temple, or else from the sun, was reckoned a crime to be punished in the same manner. And whereas great care was taken among the Jews,' that no wood should be used on their altar in the temple, but that which they reputed clean, and for this reason they had it all barked and examined before it was laid on; and that when it was laid on, the fire should never be blowed up, either with bellows, or the breath of man for the kindling of it: hence Zoroastres" ordained both these particulars to be also observed in respect of his sacred fire among his Magians commanding them to use only barked wood for the maintaining of it, and no otner means for the kindling of it up into a flame, but the pouring on of oil and the blasts of the open air. And that he should in so man}'^ things write after the Jewish religion, or have been so well Informed therein, can scarce seem probable, if he had not been fii:t "ducnted and brought up in it. Zoroastres, having thus taken ipon him to be a prophet of God, sent to re- foim the old religion of the Persians to gain the better reputation to his pre- tensions, he retired into a cave,^ and there lived a long time as a recluse, precending to be abstracted from all worldly considerations, and to be given wholly to prayer and divme meditations; and, the more to amuse the people who there resorted to him, he dressed up his cave with several mystical figures, representing Mithra, and other mysteries of their religion: from whence it be- canie for a long while after a usage among them, to choose such caves for their devotions, which being dressed up in the same manner were called Mithratic caves. While he was in this retirement, he composed the book wherein all his pretended revelations are contained, which shall be hereafter spoken of. Anu Mahomet exactly followed his example herein; for he also retired to a cave some time before he broached his imposture, and, by the help of his ac- coniplices, there formed the Alcoran, wherein it is contained. And Pythago- ras, on his return from Babylon to Samos, in imitation of his master Zoroastres (whom Clemens Alexandrinus tells us he emulously followed^) had there in like manner his cave, to which he retired, and wherein he mostly abided both day and night, and for the same end as Zoroastres did in his; that is, to get himself the greater veneration from the people: for Pythagoras acted a part of imposture as well as Zoroastres, and this perchance he also learned from him. Alter he had thus acted the part of a prophet in Media, and there settled all things according to his intentions, he removed from thence into Bactria,* the most eastern province of Persia, and there settled in the city of Balch, which lies on the river Oxus, in the confines of Persia, India, and Cowaresmia; where, under the protection of Hystaspes, the father of Darius, he soon spread his imposture through all that province with great success: for although Da- 1 SecTiiglitfoot'sTompIi! Service. 2ReIigio VcterumPersaruin.c. 29 et 30> 3 I'orphyrius in I,il)ri> do Nympharum Antro, p. 254. Edit. Cant. 4 Porphyrins in Vita Pytliagor.-E, p. 18J. Eiiit. Cantab. Jamblichiis in Vita Pythagors, c. 5. 5 Strom. 1. p. 223. (3 Abu Japhar Tabarita. Bundari. Rclig. Vet. Pers.c. 24. aOO CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF rius, after the slaughter of the Maglans, had, with most of his followers, gone over to the sect of the Sabians, yet Hystaspes still adhered to the religion of his ancestors, and having fixed his residence at Balch (where it may be sup- posed he governed those parts of the empire under his son,) did there support and promote it to the utmost of his power. And, in order to give it the greater' reputation, he went in person into India among the Brachmans,' and, having there learned from them all their knowledge in mathematics, astronomy, and natural philosophy, he brought it back among his Magians, and thoroughly in- structed them in it. And they continued for many ages after, above all others of those times, skilful in these sciences, especially after they had been farther instructed in them by Zoroastres, Avho was the greatest mathematician and the greatest philosopher of the age in which he lived; and therefore took care to improve his sect, not only in their religion, but also in all natural know- ledge; which so much advanced their credit in the world, that thenceforth a learned man and a Magain became equivalent terms. And this proceeded so far, that the vulgar, looking on their knowledge to be more than natural, entertained an opinion of them, as if they had been actuated and inspired by supernatural powers, in the same manner as, too frequently among us, igno- rant people are apt to give great scholars, and such as are learned beyond their comprehensions (as were Friar Bacon, Dr. Faustus,^ and Cornelius Agrippa,"') the name of conjurers. And from hence those who really practised wicked and diabolical arts, or would be thought to do so, taking the name of Magians, drew on it that ill signiiication, which now the word magician bears among us: whereas the true and ancient Magians were the great mathematicians,'' philo- sophers, and divines, of the ages in Avhich they lived, and had no other know- ledge but what by their own study, and the instructions of the ancients of their sect, they had improved themselves in. But it is not to be understood, that all Magians, that is, all of the sect, were thus learned, but only those who had this name by way of eminence above the rest, that is, their priests: for they being all of the same tribe,* as among the Jews (none but the son of a priest being capable of being a priest among them,) they mostly appropriated their learning to their own families, transmitting it in them from father to son, and seldom communicating it to any other, unless it were to those of the royal family, whom they were bound to instruct,^ the bet- ter to fit them for the government; and therefore there were some of them as tutors, as well as chaplains, always residing in the palaces of their kings. And whether it were that these Magians thought it would bring the greater credit to them, or the kings, that it would add a greater sacredness to their persons, or whether it were from both these causes, the royal family among the Persians, as long as this sect prevailed among them, was always reckoned of the sacer- dotal tribe. They were divided into three orders.' The lowest were the infe- rior clergy, Avho served in all the common offices of their divine worship: next above them were the superintendents, Avho in their several districts governed the inferior clergy, as the bishops do with us: and above all was the archimagus, or arch-priest, who, in the same manner as the high-priest among the Jews, or • the pope now among the Romanists, was the head of the whole religion. And, according to the number of their orders, the churches or temples in which they officiated were also of three sorts. The lowest sort were the parochial churches, 1 Amminniis Marcelliniis, lib. 23. 2 John F.iust w.ns tlie first inventor of priiitins; at Mentz, and from thence being taken for a conjurer, that •tory is here in England made of him, which goes under the name of Dr. Faustus. 3 That which contributes most to the opinion, that Cornelius Agrippa was a magician, is an impertinent piece published under his name, entitled, Dc Occulta Philosophia, which that learned man was never the au- thor of; for it is not to be found in the folio edition of his works, in which only those that arc genuine and trulv his arecontained. 4 "Dion C'hrysostomu? tells us {in Orationc Borysthenica,) that the Persians call them Magians who are ■killed in the worship of the gods, and not as the Greeks, who being ignorant of the meaning of the word ull them so who were skilful in goetic magic.i. e. that which jugglers aiid conjur«,rs pretend to make use of. 5 Relisio Vet. Pers. c. 30. p. "307. Theodoreti Hist. Eccles. lib. 5. c.38. 6 Plato in .'\lcibiadc 1. Siobseus, p. 496. Clemens Alexandrinus in Piedagogo 1. p. 81. 7 Re!;?:Q Vet. Pors. c. 28 ct 'M. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 201 •jr oratories, which were served by the inferior clergy, as the parochial churches arc now with us; and the duties which they there performed were, to read the daily offices out of their liturgy, and, at stated and solemn times, to read some part of their sacred writings to the people. In these churches there were no fire-altars; but the sacred fire, before which they here worshipped, was main- tained only in a lamp. Next above these were their fire-temples, in which fire was continually kept burning on a sacred altar. And these were, in the same manner as cathedrals with us, the churches or temples where the superintend- ents resided. In every one of these were also several of the inferior clergy entertained, who, in the same manner as the choral vicars among us, performed all the divine offices under the superintendent, and also took care of the sacred fire, which they constantly watched day and night by four and four in their turns, that it might be always kept burning, and never go out. 3dly. The high- est church above all was the fire-temple, where the archimagus resided, which was "had in the same veneration with them as the temple of Mecca among the Mahometans, to which every one of that sect thought themselves obliged to make a pilgrimage once in their lives. Zoroastres first settled it at Balch, and there he, as their archimagus, usually had his residence. But after the Maho- metans had overrun Persia, in the seventh century after Christ, the archima- gus was forced to remove from thence into Kerman, which is a province in Per- sia, lying upon the southern ocean, toward India, and there it hath continued even to this day. And to the fire-temple there erected, at the place of his resi- dence, do they now pay the same veneration as formerly they did to that of Balch. This temple of the archimagus, as also the other fire-temples, were en- dowed with large revenues in lands; but the parochial clergy depended solely on the tithes and offerings of the people: for this usage also had Zoroastres (aken from the Jewish church, and made it one of his establishments among his Magians. The impostor having thus settled his new scheme of Magianism throughout the province of Bactria, with the same success as he had before in Media, he went next to the royal court at Susa," where he inanaged his pretentions with that craft, address, and insinuation, that he soon got within Darius himself, and made him a proselyte to his new reformed religion; whose example, in a short time, drew after it into the same profession the courtiers, nobility, and all the great men of the kingdom. This happened in the thirtieth year of Darius; and, although it succeeded not without great opposition from the ringleaders of the Sabians, who were the opposite sect, yet the craft, address, and dexterity of the imj)ostor surmounted them all, and so settled his new device, that thence- forth it became the national religion of all that country, and so continued for many ages after, till this imposture was at last supplanted by that of Mahomet, which was raised almost by the same arts. They who professed this religion in Lucian's time,- as reckoned up by him, were the Persians, the Parthians, the Bactrians, the Cowaresmians, the Arians, the Sacans, the Modes, and many other barbarous nations; but since that, the new imposture hath grown up to the suppressing of the old in all these countries. However, there is a remnant of these Magians still remaining in Persia and India, wlvi even to this day ob- serve the same religion which Zoroastres first taught thr m; for they still have his book, wherein their religion is contained, which they keep and reverence in the same manner as the Christians do the Bible, and the Mahometans the Alcoran, making it the sole rule both of their faith and manners. This book the impostor composed while he lived in his retirement in the cavc,^ and tlierein are contained all his pretended revelations. When he pre- sented it to Darius, it w^as bound up in twelve volumes, whereof each consisted of an hundred skins of vellum; for it ^was the usage of the Persians in those times to write; all on skins.' This book is called Zendavesta, and, by contiac- J Religio Vot. Pits. c. 21. 2 Lucian de Longsevis. 3 Relieio. Vet. Peis. c. 2J. 20. 4DiodonisSic. lib. 2 p. 118. Vol. I.— 26 i)02 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF tion, Zend, the vulgar pronounce it Zundavestow, and "Zund. The word ori- ginally signifieth a fire-kindler, such as is a tinder-box with us; which fantasti- cal name the impostor gave it, because, as he pretended, all that would read ;T8. Torlii? an In Apnlogotico. ("Icinctis .Alcvandriniis in Pa;dagogn I. p. 81. d Strom. .^. p. :!l 1 t Pliitarcliiis de Fortuna Ale.\andri. 3 Religio Vel. !''.'r,. r. •_'!. 204 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY Of »ld. But this Is no strange thuig in those parts: for the air being Ihoroughly >ure and healthy, the perspiration free and regular, and all the fruits of the earth fully concocted, they who can there avoid the excesses of lust and luxury, asually live to a great age: of which we have lately had two instances, in Au- rang-Zeb, king of India, and Rajah-Singah, king of Candia, in the island of Ceylon; the former dying in the year 1708, of the age of near an hundred, and the other about twenty years before much older. But Dai-us soon revenged the injury upon the Scythian king: for, falling on him before he could make his retreat, he overthrew him with a great slaughter, and drove him out of the province; after which he rebuilt again all the fire- tem- ples that had been demolished by the enemy, and especially that at Balch; which he erected with a grandeur suitable to its dignity, it being the patriarchal temple of the sect; and, therefore, from the name of its restorer, it was thence- forth called Auzur Gustasp,' i. e. the fire-temple of Darius Hystaspes. And the care which he took in this matter, shows the zeal w^hich he had for his new re- ligion, which he still continued to propagate after the death of its author with the same ardour as before. And, the better to preserve its credit and reputation after this accident, he thenceforth took it on himself to be their archimagus: for Porphyry tells us," he ordered before his death, that, among other his titles, it should be engraven on his monument, that he was master of the Magians; which plainly implies, that he bore his office among them (for none but the archimagus was master of the whole sect.) But it was not long that he was in it; for he died the next year after. However, from hence it seems to have proceeded that the kings of Persia were ever after looked on to be of the sacerdotal tribe, and were always initiated into the sacred order of the Magians,^ before they took on them the crown, or were inaugurated into the kingdom. The Greeks had the name of Zoroastres in great esteem,'* speaking of him as the great master of all human and divine knowledge. Plato,* Aristotle,® Plu- tarch,' and Porphyry,* mention him with honour, acknowledging his great learn- ing; and so do others. Plyny saith much of him;® and particularly remarks, that he was the only person that laughed on the day in which he was born; and that the pulsation of his head did then beat so strong, that it heaved up the hand laid upon it: which last, he saith, was a presage of his future learning. Solinus tells us the same story of his laughing on the day of his birth; and saith, that he was optimarum artium peritissiTmis, i. e. viost sJdlful in ihe knowledge of the best arts.^° And Apuleius's character of him is, that he was omms divini arcani antistes, i. e. the chief doctor in all divine mysteides}^ Cedrenus names him as a famous astronomer among the Persians, and Suidas saith of him,'" that he excelled all others in that science. And this reputation he still hath over all the east, even among those who are most averse to his sect to this very day: for they all there, as well Mahometans as Sablans, give him the title of Hakim," that is, of a wise and learned philosopher, and reckon him as the most skilful and eminent of their ancient astronomers. And particularly Ulugh Beigh, that famous and learned Tartarian prince, writing a book of astronomy and astrology, doth therein prefer Zoroastres before all others for his skill and knowledge in these sciences.''* It is to be observed also, that they who write of Pythagoras, do almost all of them tell us that he was the scholar of Zoroastres at Babylon, and learned of him, and of his disciples the Magians, most of that knowledge which afterward rendered him so famous in the west. So saith Apuleius,'^ and so say Jamblichus,"^ Porphyry,*' and Clemens Alexandrinus'* (for the Zabratus, or Zaratus, of Porphyry, and the Na-Zaratus of Clemens, were none other than 1 Religio Vetcniin Persariiin, c. 23. 2 Porpliyriiia de Abstinetitia, lib. 4. p. 365. edit. Cant. 3 Cicero de Divinatione, lib. 1. I'hilo Judcpiis de Specialib'us Lecibus. Plutarchiis in Arta.ver.ve. 4 Diojenes Laertiiis in Proremin. 5 In Alcihiade 1. () III librode Maeia citante Laertio in ProfiMiiio. 7 Do Isiilo et Osiride. 8 In Vita Pythacorif!. 0 liib 30. c. J. lib. 7. c. Ki. 10 ('a|i. 1. 11 Floridoriini secnndo 12 In vocibiis M^y-' et 'Arrpoi s,u. •. et ?,■ fo^rrc^... 13 Rolisio Vet. Pers. c. i24. p. 312. M Rpjigio Vet. Pers. c. 24. p. 312. 15 Floridorum secnndo. 16 In Vita PvthaKora\ c ♦. 17 Ibid. p. 185. edit. Cant. Itj Strom. 1. p. 223. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 205 tins Zoroastres;) and they relate the matter thus: — That when Cambysus con quered Egypt, he found Pythagoras there on his travels,' for the improvement of himself in the learning of that country; and that, after having taken him prisoner, he sent him with other captives to Babylon, where Zoroastres (or Za- bratus, as Porphyry calls him) then lived; and that there he became his disciple, and learned many things of him of the eastern learning. The words of Porphyry are, " That by Zabratus he was cleansed from tlie pollutions of his life past, and instructed from what things virtuous persons ought to be free, and also learned from him the discourse concerning nature, and what are the princi2:)les of the universe."'^ This doth not disagree with the age of Zoroastres, nor with the time in which Pythagoras is said to have lived. For Zoroastres being a very old man at the time of his death,'' past eighty at least, if we reckon thirty-eight years back from the time of his death, it will prove him to be forty-two at least when Cambyses conquered Egypt. And that Pythagoras flourished at the same time is sufficiently evidenced, in that he had for his contemporaries, Polycrates tyrant of Samos, Amasis king of Egypt, and Milo the Crotonian. For when Pythagoras went into Egypt,'' he carried with him from Polycrates letters of re- commendation to Amasis, which Amasis' died in the same year in which Cam- byses invaded that country; and Milo, who was Pythagoras's scholar,*^ was vic- tor in the wrestling games at the sixty-second Olympiad,' seven years before Cambyses invaded Egypt, and about the seventh year of Darius Hystaspes mar- ried his daughter to Democides the physician,* and about twenty years after Pythagoras was in Milo's house, ^ when he was assaulted by Cylon, one of his scholars, and slain. Hereby it appears, that Zoroastres and Pythagoras both flourished together, between the beginning of the reign of Cyrus and the latter end of that of Darius Hystaspes. But if what is said of Pythagoras's being taken prisoner by Cambyses' soldiers in Egypt doth not exactly accord with what others write of the different stage's of his life, this is owing to the uncer- tainty of tiie ancient Greek chronology. For Sir John Marsham observes right,'" that till after the time of Alexander the Greeks were far from being accurate in this matter. But however this be, that Pythagoras was in Egypt, and from thence went to Babylon, and learnt there a great part of that knowledge which he was afterward so famous for, is agreed by all." His stay there, Jamblichus tells us, was twelve years:'- and that, in his converse with the Magians, he learned from them (over and above what hath been before mentioned out of Porphyry) arithmetic, music, and the knowledge of divine things, and the sa- cred mysteries pertaining thereto. But the most important doctrine whiclf he brought home from thence was, that of the immortality of the soul: for it is ge- nerally agreed among the ancients, that he was the first of all the Greeks that taught it.'^ And this, I take it for'certain, he had from Zoroastres; for, as I have before shown, it was his doctrine, and he is the ancientest of any whom we have upon record of all the heathen nations that taught it. But Pythagoras did not bring this doctrine into Greece with that purity in which he received it from his master; for having corrupted it with a mixture of the Indian philosophy (for this also he had learned in the east,) he made this immortality to consist in an eternal transmigration of the soul from one body to another;'"' whereas Zoroastres' doctrine was, that there is to be a resurrection of the dead,'^ and an immortal state after to follow, in the same manner as Daniel taught,"^ and the people of God then held, and we now; and there is no doubt but that he had it from them. 1 Jamblicliiis ric Vita Pythagora;, c. 4. Apuleius Floridorum secundo. 2 III Vita I'ythadora;, p. 185. edit. Cant. 3 Religio Voterum Persaiuiii, c. 2t. p. 326. 4 Diogenes Laertiiis et Porphyrins in Vita Pythagora;. 5 Ilerodot. lib. 3. Diodorus SIculus, lib. 1. 6 Slrabo, lib. 6. p. 203. Jamblichus in Vita Pythagoras, c. 3C. 7 Africani 'A.vxyfx^rt 'OK^u-i.:. Kdit. IJeins. 9 Gr. Tcu'Ap/^tv'ou, which is truly to be interpreted, not the son, but the worshipper of Armenius, who is otherwise called Ariinanius, that is, Ahraman, who was the evil >,'od of the Masians. In the same manner he is elsewhere called T:u'i!foux;ou, and tou llfo^ztrTix',-, that is, not the son, but the worshipper of Oroniazea or Oromasdes, who was the other god, that is, the good god of the Magians. See .Agathias, lib. 2. el Btoha:us, p. 490. 10 Arnobius, lib. ]. p. 31. 11 Suidas sub voce 7..,fi-ttrrfM. 12 Plinius. lib. 30. cap. 1. 13 In Proa;mio. 14 Suidas sub vocibus M^tj-oi ct 'Ao-ipjvo/iia. 15 Plin. ibid. 10 In voce JanSoj 17 AthencEus, lib. 12. 18 Suetonius in Antcnio Gniphone Voseius de Historicis Giirci,-=,lib. 4. c. .1 19 Plinius, lib. 30. cap. 1. 20 Plin. ibid. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 207 mrae of which we now treat. But however that matter was, thus much is certain, that the Zoroastres that was the Zerdusht of the Persians, who was the Treat patriarch of the JNIagians, who wrote the book Zendavesta (which is the Bible jf that sect,) and whose name is still in the same veneration among them, as that of Moses is among the Jews, and that of Mahomet among the Mahome- tans, lived in no other times than those where I have placed him. Possibly there might be anqj^icr before him of the same name, and he the same of which the book ascribed to Xanthus Lydius did speak. If any one shall soy, that the former was the founder of the Magian sect, and the latter the reformer of it, and for that reason called by the same name, I shall not contradict the conjecro^re; for I am apt to think that may be the truth of the matter. Some of the ancient heretics,' especially the followers of Prodicus, pretend- ed to have the secret books of Zoroastres containing his revelations, and other mysteries of religion, and offered to make use of them in defence of their heri- sies. Against these Plotinus- and Porphyry did both write, and fully showed to have been the forgeries of the Gnostic Christians. And others have gathered together out of Proclus, Simplicius, Damascius, Synesius, Olympiodorus, and other writers, what the}' call the oracles of Zoroastres; and several editions have been published of them in Greek with the scholia or comments of Pletho and Psellus. But all these are mere figments coined by the Platonic philosophers, who lived after the time of Christ, and are condemned as such by St. Chrysos- tom,'' w ho plainly tells us, that they were all figments. If any are desirous to see what unintelligible and nonsensical stuff these oracles do contain, they may consult Mr. Stanley's book of the Chaldaic Philosophy, which is published at the end of his History of Philosophy, where they will find them translated into English from the collection of Francis Patricius. Abul-Pharagius tells us, that Zerdusht* (or Zoroastres) foretold to his Ma- gians the commg of Christ, and that, at the time of his birth, there should appear a wonderful star, which should shine by day as well as by night; and therefore left it in command with them, that when that star should appear, they should follow the directions of it, and go to the place where he should be born, and there offer gifts, and pay their adoration unto him; and that it was by this command, that the three wise men came from the east, that is, out of Persia, to worship Christ at Bethlehem. And so far Sharistani,* though a Mahometan writer, doth agree with him, as that he tells us, that Zerdusht (or Zoroastres) foretold the coming of a v/onderful person in the latter times, Avho should reform the world both in religion and righteousness; and that kings jyid princes should become obedient to him, and give him their assistance in pro- moting the true religion, and all the works thereof. But what these attribute to the prophecy of Zoroastres," others refer to the prophec}^ of Balaam; and say, that it was by his prediction that the wise men were led by the star to seek Christ in Judea, and there pay their adoration unto him. But all this seems to be taken out of the legendary writings of the eastern Christians. And Abul- Pharagius, though an Arab writer, being by religion a Christian, it is most likely that what he tells us of this matter was taken from them. Those who are still remaining of this sect in Persia' have there the name of Gaurus, which in the Arabic signifieth infidels, and is the usual appellation which the Mahometans bestow on all that arc not of their rehgion. But those people have this name in Persia by way of eminency, as if there were none other such like them; and therefore they are called by it, as if it were their na- tional name, and are known by none other in that country; and whosoever speaks of a Gaur there, understands none other by it, than one of this sect. They have a suburb at Hispahan, the metropolis of Persia, which is called 1 Clemens Alcxandriniis. Strom. I. p. 223. 2 Vide liiicam Holstcnium dc Vita et Scriptis Porpliyrii, c 9. p. 57. edit. Cam. 3 In Vita Hal)vl,TMartyris. 4 Historia Dyiiastiariim, p. 54. 5 Religio Vet. Pers.c. .31. p. 382, 38i 6 Theodoni.s Tarsensls. 7 Thevenot's Travels. Samson's Present State of Persia. Tavernier Religio Vet. Pers. e. 2!» 208 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Gaurabad, or the town of the Gaurs, where they are employed only in the, meanest and vilest drudgeries of the town. And some of them are scattered abroad in other places of that country, where they are made use of in the like services. But the bulk of them is in Kerman, which being the most barren and worst province of all Persia, and where others care not to dwell, the Mahome- tans have been content to" permit them to live there with some freedom and the full exercise of their religion. But every where else they^se them as dogs, esteeming them as to their religion the worst of all those that differ from them: and it is with a wonderful constancy that they bear this oppression. Some age? since, for the avoiding of it, several of them fled into India, and settled there in the country about Surat; where their posterity are still remaining even to this day.* And a colony of them is settled in Bombay,' an island in those parts be longing to the English, where they are allowed, without any molestation, the full freedom and exercise of their religion. They are a poor, harmless sort of people, zealous in their superstition, rigorous in their morals, and exact in theii dealings, professing the worship of one God only, and the belief of a resurrec- tion and a future judgment, and utterly detesting all idolatry, although reckon- ed by the Mahometans the most guilty of it: for although they perform their worship before fire, and toward the rising sun, yet they utterly deny that they worship either of them. They hold, that more of God is in these his creatures than in any other, and that therefore they worship God toward them, as being, in their opinion, the truest Shechinah of the divine presence among us, as dark- ness is that of the devil's; and as to Zoroastres, they still have him in the same veneration as the Jews have Moses, looking on him as the great prophet of God, by whom he sent his law, and communicated his will unto them. An. 485. Xerxes 1.] — Xerxes, having ascended the throne," employed the first year of his reign in carrying on the preparations for the reduction of Egypt, which his father had begun. He confirmed to the Jews at Jerusalem all the privileges granted them by his father,^ especially that of having the tribute of Samaria for the furnishing of them with sacrifices, for the carrying on of divine worship in the temple of God in that place. *dn. -184. Xerxes 2.] — In the second year of his reign, he marched against the Egyptians, and having thoroughly vanquished and subdued these revolters, he* reduced them under a heavier yoke of servitude than they were before; and then toward the end of the year, after having made Achemenes, one of his brothers, governor of the province, returned again to Susa. T^his year Herodotus, the famous historian,'' was born at Halicarnassus in Caria; for he was fifty-three years old when the Peloponnesian war first began. An. 483. Xerxes 3.] — Xerxes being puffed up with his success against the Egyptians, upon the advice and instigation of Mardonius, the son of Gobrias, who had married one of his sisters, ** resolved upon a war with Greece; and, in order thereto, made great preparations for three years together throughout all ihe provinces of the Persian empire. Joshua the high-priest of the Jews at Jerusalem," died in the fifty-third year of his high-priesthood, and^ Joiakim his son succeeded him in that office. Jin. 48"2. Xerxes 4.] — Xerxes being resolved on the Grecian war,® entered into a league with the Carthaginians: whereby it was agreed, that while the Persians invaded Greece, the Carthaginians should fall on all those who were of the Grecian name in Sicily and Italy, that thereby they might be diverted from one helping the other. And the Carthaginians made choice of Hamilcar to be their general in this war, who not only raised what forces he could in Africa, but also with the money sent him by Xerxes hired a great number of mercenaries out of Spain, Gallia, and Italy: so that he got together an army of three 1 Ovington's Travels. 2 Herodotus, lib. 7. 3 Joseph. AHtiq. lib. 11. c. 5. 4 Ilerodot. lib. 7. 5 Aulus Gellius, lib. 15. c. 23. C Ilerodot. lib. 7. 7 Chronicon Alexandrioum. ft Nell. xii. 10 Joseph. Antiq. lib. 10. c. 5. 9 Diod. Sic. lib. 11. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 209 handled thousand men, and a fleet porportionable hereto, for the prosecuting the intent of this league. Jin. 181. Xerxes 5.] — And thus Xei'xes, according as was foretold by the pro- phet Daniel,' having, "by his strength, and through his great riches, stirred up all the then known habitable world against the realm of Grecia," that is, all the west under the command of Hamilcar, and all the cast under his own, he did" in the fifth year of his reign, which was^ the tenth after the battle of Marathon, set out from Susa to begin the war, and having marched as far as Sardis, wintered there. ^n. 460. Xerxes 6.] — Early the next spring,'' Xerxes did set out for the Hel- lespont; over which two bridges of boats having been laid, the one for his army, and the other for his carriages and beasts of burden, he passed all over in seven days; during all which time they were continually passing, day and night, be- fore all could get over: so great was the number of them that attended him in \his expedition. From thence marching through the Thracian Chersonesus, he arrived at Doriscus, a city at the mouth of the River Hebrus, in Thracia; at which place having encamped his army, and ordered his fleet also to attend him o-n the adjacent shore, he there took an account of both. His land army, upon the muster, was found to be one rnillion seven hundred thousand foot and eighty thousand horse, besides his chariots and his camels; for which allowing twenty thousand more, the whole will amount to one million eight hundred thousand men. His fleet consisted of one thousand two hundred and seven ships of the line of battle, besides galleys, transports, victuallers, and other sorts of vessels that attended, which were three thousand more; on board all wliich were reckoned to be five hundred and seventeen thousand six hundred and ten men. So that the whole number of forces, by sea and land, which Xerxes brought with him out of Asia to invade Greece, amounted to two millions three hundred and seventeen thousand six hundred and ten men. After his passing the Hellespont, the nations on this side that submitted to him, added to his land army three hundred thousand men more, and two hundred and twenty ships to his fleet, on board of which were twenty-four thousand men. So that, putting all together, his forces, by sea and land, by that time he came to the straits of Thermopylae, made up the number of two millions six hundred and forty-one thousand six hundred and ten men: and the servants, eunuchs, women, suttlers, and all such other people as followed the camp, were computed to be no less than as many more. So that the whole number of persons of all sorts that fol- lowed Xlirxes in this expedition, were at least five millions. This is Herodo- tus's account of them,^ and Plutarch" and Isocrates' agree witli him herein. But Diodorus Siculus,** Pliny," ^lian,'° and others, do, in their computations, fall much short of this number, making the army of Xerxes, with which he passed the Hellespont against Greece, to be very little more than that Avith which Darius's father passed the Bosphorus to make war upon the Scythians. It is probable they might have mistaken the one for the other. The verses engraved on the monument of those Grecians who were slain at Thermopylse, best agree with the account of Herodotus; for in them it is said" that they there Jirht against two millions of men. And he being the ancicntest author that [•iSh v.-ritten of this war, and having lived in the age in which it happened, and treated of it more particularly, and with a greater appearance of exactness than any other, his computation seemeth the most likely to be the truest; and that especially since; we find it to be the general opinion of the ancients, both Greeks and Latins, that this was the greatest army that was ever brought into the field. Josephus tells us,'- that a band of Jews was also in this army, and brings for 1 Dan. .\i. 2. 2 Ileroilol. lih. 7. 3 Tliiicv fides, lib. 1. 4 Herndnt. lit). 7. Diod, Sjculus, lib. 11. I'lmarclms in Ttirmistoclc ct Ari.«t"ide. .liistiii. lib. 2. c. lO. .5 UtTodot. lib. 7. t) III Themistor.lo. 7 In I'aiiatlicnaico. ^ I-ih. 11. 0 Lib. 3:t. c. 10. 10 Var. Ilistur. lib. 13. c. 3. 11 Hi'rodot. lib. 7. Ditiil. Siculus, lib. 11. p. 2t). This ingcriptinn, according to the reading as in HrrodotUB, »aith they were three millions, but as in Diodorus only two million'. 12 (\>ntra .Vpioneia, lib. I Vol. I.~27 210 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF proof of it a passage out of the poet Chcerilus, who, in describing the army of Xerxes, as they passed on by their several nations in their march, hath these verses- Then next did march, in habit and in mien, A people wonderful for to be seen; Their language is in dialect the same, Which men do speak of the Phoenician name. They dwell in the high Solymeean land. On hills, near which there doth a great lake stand. Jerusalem, having also had the name of Solyma,' and all the country tnere about being mountainous, and lying near the great lake Asphaltites, commonly called the Lake of Sodom, this description seems plainly to suit the Jews, espe- cially since it is also mentioned that they spake the Phcenician language, the Syriac being then the vulgar language of the Jews. But Scahger,^ Cunoseus,' and Bochartus,'' understand it of the Solymi in Pisidia. However, Salmasius maintains the contrary opinion,^ and justifies Josephus in it; and it must be said, that it is not at all likely, that when Xerxes called all the other nations of the Persian empire to follow him to this war, the Jews alone should be excused from it. And therefore, whether these, whom Chcerilus speaks of, were Jews or not, it must be taken for certain, that they also did bear a part in this expe- dition. After Xerxes had taken this account of his fleet and army at Doriscus," ht marched from thence with his army through Thrace, Macedon, and Thessaly toward Attica, and ordered his fleet to attend him on the coasts all the way, making the same stations by sea that he did by land. All yielded to him in his march without any opposition, till he came to the Straits of Thermopylse; where Leonidas, king of the Lacedemonians, with three hundred Spartans, and as many other Greeks as made up a body of four thousand men, defended the pass against him. For two days he made it good against all the numerous army of the Per- sians, repulsing them in every assault with a great slaughter of their men. But on the third day, being ready to be surrounded by the Persians, through the treachery of a certain Greek, who led them by a secret way over the moun- tains, to fall on them in their rear, all retired, saving Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans, and some few others that Avould not desert them, who, reso- lutely abiding by the post they had undertaken to defend, were at length all slain upon the spot. But the Persians paid very dear for this victory, having lost in the gaining of it twenty thousand of their men, and among them two of the brothers of Xerxes. After this, Xerxes^ entered through Bceotia into Attica, the country of the Athenians; having spent in his march thither, since his passing the Hellespont, four months. The Athenians, not bemg able to defend themselves against so great a force, deserted their city, putting all their men aboard their fleet, and securing their wives and children in Salamis, JEgina, and Trcezene, neighbouring cities, which, by the intervention of the sea, were out of the reach of his army; so that, on his coming thither, he became master of the place, without any opposition. In the interim, the Persian and Grecian* fleets lying near each other, the former at Ephatse, and the other at Artimisium, above Eubcea, had several en- counters with each other, in every one of which the Grecians had the advan- tage; and, though it was not great, yet it served them to show, that the enemy, notwithstanding their great number, were not invincible; which gave them the heart afterward, with the greater courage and resolution, to fight against them. However, their ships being much shattered by these several encounters, they 1 Rv pbbreviatinn Tnr riierosolvma. 2 In Notisad Frapmonta. 3 De Ropiiblica Hebraconiin. lih. 2 f. ^ft. 4 Geo^'raphia Sacra. S[)art. 2. lib. 1. c.2. 5 In Cssilfigio l-ingus Ucllflr.LsliC*!. 6 Herndot. lib. 7. Dimlnr. Sic. lih. 11. I'lutaichus in Thnnistnclo. 7 Horodot. lib. 8. Dindnr. Piculiis, lib. 11. Plularchiis in Aristide him any just cause to be offended with him. However, all this could not prolt'ct Jam from Xerxes' cruelty; which sufficiently shows, that where there is a vicious prince, with an arbitrary power in the government, there is nothing that fan be sufficient to secure any man's safety under him. And there is another fact related of Hamestris,' equally cruel and impious; that is, that she caused fourteen boys of the best families in Persia to be buried ?.li\e as a sacrifice to the infernal gods. And, in the relating of this, as well a? her other cruelties above mentioned, I have been the more particular, because several having been of opinion," by reason of the similitude that is between th« names of Hamestris and Esther, that Xerxes was the Ahasuerus, and Hamestri, the Esther, mentioned in scripture; it may from hence appear, how impossibh it is, that a woman of so vile and abominable a character, as Hamestris was could have ever been that queen of Persia, who, by the name of Esther, is so renowned in holy writ, and is there recorded as the instrument by whom God was pleased, in so signal a manner, to deliver his people from that utter de- struction which was desio-ned a^-ainst them. After the death of Masistes, Xerxes appointed Hastaspes,^ his second son, to be governor of Bactria in his stead; which obliging him to be absent from court, gave Artaxerxes his younger brother the opportunity of mounting the throne be- fore him, on the death of Xerxes, as will be hereafter related. An. 476. Xerxes 10.] — The Grecian fleet, having effected at Cyprus what they went thither for, sailed from thence to the Hellespont,'' and took in Byzantium; where several Persians of eminent note, and some of them of the kindred of Xerxes, being taken prisoners, Pausanias treacherously released them all, pre- tending they had made their escape, and by some of them entered 'into a treaty with Xerxes to betray Greece unto him, upon condition that he would give him one of his daughters in marriage; which being readily agreed to by Xerxes, Pausanias thenceforth took upon him to live after another rate than formerly, affecting the pomp and grandeur of the Persians, "and carrying himself haughtily and tyrannically toward the allies: whereon, they being disgusted with his con- duct, and not being able any longer to bear it, did put themselves under the Athenians, who thenceforth, by this means, obtained the chief command at sea in all the Grecian affairs, and held it for many years after. The Lacedemonians, having received an account of these miscarriages of Pausanias, deposed him from his command on the Hellespont, and, recalling him home, put him under public censure for them. An. 475. Xerxes 11.] — However, the next year he went again to the Helles- pont,* although without the consent of the state, or any commission from them, sailing thither in a private ship; which he hired on pretence of fighting against the Persians as a volunteer in that war, but in reality to carry on his treasonable designs with them, Artabazus being appointed governor on the Propontis on purpose to be there at hand to treat with him. But while he was at Byzantium, his behaviour was such, that the Athenians drove him thence; whereon he went to the country of Troas, and there tarried some time, the better to carry on his correspondence with Artabazus; of which there being some suspicions, the Lace- demonians summoned him home by a public ofiicer, and, on his return, put him in prison; but no evidence appearing of this thing in his trial, he was again dis- charged. But some time after, the whole of it being brought to light, and disco- vered by one whom he had made use of to carry on the correspondence, they put him to death for it. An. M'l. Xerxes 14.] — Themistocles,^ by his wisdom and great application, having much advanced the power and interest of the Athenians, hereby drew on him the bitter enmity of the Lacedemonians: for they, seeing their honour eclipsed, and that authority, whereby they had hitherto borne the chief swav 1 Jloroilot. lib. 7. 2 Scaliser and his followers. SDiodor. i^ir. lih. II. 4 Thucyiliilcs, lib. 1. Diod. Pic. lib. 11. I'lutarcliiis in Aristide. 5 Thiicydides, lib. 1. I'lularchus in Aristide et Tlieinistocle. Cornelius Nepos in i'ans;iiii3. C Herodotus, lib. 7, &c. Thucydidcs, lib. 1. I'lutarchus in Themistocle. Diod. r^ir lio. U. Vol. L— 28 , 218 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF among the Greeks, now riv&lled and diminished by the growing up of this flourishing state, could not with patience bear it; and therefore, to gratify theii revenge, resolved on the ruin of him that had been the author of it. In ordei whereto, they caused him first to be accused at Athens of being a confederate with Pausanias in his treason against Greece; but nothing being proved of what was laid to his charge, he was there acquitted. An. 471. Xerxes 15.] — But the next year after' Themistocles being banished Athens, they renewed their design against him. He was not banished for any crime, but by ostracism: which was a way among them'- whereby, for the bet- ter securing of their liberty, they used to suppress those that were grown to too great a power and authority among them, by banishing them the city for a certain term of years. Themistocles being thus necessitated for a time to leave tiis country, settled at Argos; of which the Lacedemonians taking the advan- tage, prosecuted anew their charge against him before the general council of ■A\ Greece, then met at Sparta, and summoned him to appear before them to answer to it, accusing him there of treason against the whole community of Greece. Themistocles seeing how bitterly the Lacedemonians were set against him, and knowing that they could carry every thing as they pleased in that as- sembly, durst not trust his cause with them, but fled first to Corcyra, and from thence to Admetus, king of the Molossians, by whose assistance being con- veyed to the coasts of the iEgean Sea, he took shipping at Pydna in Macedo- nia, and from thence passed over to Cyma, a city of iEolia in the Lesser Asia. But Xerxes having put a price of two hundred talents upon his head (which amounted to thirty-seven thousand five hundred pounds of our money,) several were there upon the hunt after him for the gain of so great a reward. For the avoiding of this danger, he was forced there to lie hid for some time; till at length, by the contrivance and assistance of his friend and host Nicogenes, the richest man of that country, he was conveyed safe to Susa, in one of those close chariots in which the Persians used to carry their women; they that had the conducting of him giving out, that they were carrying a young Greek lady to the court for one of the nobihty; by which means he got to the Persian court without any danger; where being arrived, he addressed himself to Artabanus, the captain of the guards, to whose office it belonged to bring those to the audi- ence of the king that had any business with him: by him he was introduced into Xerxes' presence; and being there asked who he was, he told him he was Themistocles the Athenian; that, though he had done him great hurt in his wars, yet he had in many things much served him, particularly in hindering the Greeks from pursuing him after the battle of Salamis, and obstructing his retreat over the Hellespont; that, for these his services to him being driven out of his country, he was now fled to him for refuge, hoping that he would have more regard to what he had done for his interest, than to what, with the rest of his countrymen, he had in the wars acted against it. Xerxes then said nothing to him; though, as soon as he was withdrawn, he expressed a great deal of joy and satisfaction, that so considerable a person was come over to him, wishing that God would always put it into the minds of his enemies thus to drive their best men from them. But the next morning, having assembled the chief of the Persian nobility about him, and ordered him again to be brought into his pre- sence, he received him with great kindness; telling him, in the first place, thai he owed him two hundred talents: for he having set that price upon his head, il was due to him who had brought him his head, by thus rendering himself unto him; and accordingly commanded it to be paid him: and then ordered him tc say what he had concerning the affairs of Greece to impart unto him. But The- mistocles, being then no otherwise able to deliver himself than by an interpre- ter, begged leave that he might be permitted first to learn the Persian language; looping that then he might be in a capacity to communicate to the king what he had to impart to him in a much more perfect manner, than he could then f ro- I Tliucyiliiles lib. 1. Plutaiclms in Thimistocle Diod. Sic. lib. 11. 2 Plutjicliiis in Aristido. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. :2iy mise to do by the interpretation of another: which being granted to liini, and he having after a year's time made himself thorough master of that tongue, he was again called into the king; to whom having communicated all that he thought proper, he grew very much into his favour, so that when Mandana his sister, who had lost several of her sons in the battle of Salamis, had prosecuted an ac- cusation against Themistocles for their death, and was very importunate and clamorous to have delivered up to her a sacrifice to her revenge, he not only caused him to be acquitted by the suffrages of all the nobility then attendino; the court, but conferred many royal bounties upon him; for he gave him a wife of a noble Persian family, with a house, servants, and an equipage in all things suitable hereto, and an annual revenue sufficient to enable him in the best man- ner to support the same, and on all occasions much caressed him as long as he continued in his court. And it is mentioned as one particular instance of his favour to him, that by his especial command, he was admitted to hear the lec- tures and discourses of the Magians,' and was instructed by them in all the se- crets of their philosophy. But at length, it being thought best for the king's in- terest, that he shovdd reside in some of the maritime towns near Greece, that he might be there ready at hand for such services as the king might have occasion of from him in those parts, he was sent to live at Magnesia, on the river Mean- der; wliere he had not only all the revenues of that city (which were fifty ta- lents a year,) but also those of Myus and Lampsacus allowed him for his main- tenance, amounting altogether to one hundred and fifty talents a year, which was little less than thirty thousand pounds of our money. And here he lived all the time of Xerxes, and several years after, in the reign of Artaxerxes his Bon, in a very plentiful and splendid manner, as well he might, on so large a revenue, till at length he ended his days in that city in the manner as shall be hereafter related. But according to Thucydides," Xerxes was dead, and Artaxerxes had newly succeeded in the throne, when Themistocles fled out of Greece to the Persian court; and therefore he tells i», that it was Artaxerxes Longimanus, and not Xerxes, by whom Themistocles was received with so much favour; and Thucy- dides being an historian of great credit, and having wrote tliis not many years after the death of Artaxerxes,^ the lord-primate Usher, moved by so great an authority, follows him in this matter; and to make it accord with the other trans- actions of those times, takes nine years from the reign of Xerxes, and adds them'* to the following reigns, making Xerxes to end his reign nine years sooner, and Artaxerxes to begin his reign nine years sooner tlian any other author says. Hereby the learned primate doth exceedingly help his hypothesis of the com- putation of the seventy weeks of Daniel's prophecy; and that, no doubt, induced him to prefer the authority of Thucydides before all others in this particular. For if we put the twentieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus (from whence he reckons the beginning of these seventy weeks) nine years higher than others do, the middle of the last week will fall exactly in with the time when Christ was crucified. And therefore, were the authority of Thucydides sufficient tc justify him in this matter, the primate's computation would appear much more plausible than now it doth. But the Canon of Ptolemy,'' Diodorus Siculus, Plu- tarch, Africanus, Eusebius, and all otlicrs that write of these times, being against him herein, it is much more probable, that Thucydides was out in this particular; for although he be a very exact historian in the affairs of Greece, of which he professedly writes, yet it is possible he might be mistaken in those of Persia, which he treats of only by the by. In the interim, the Athenians, having set out a fleet under the command of Cimon,'^the son of Miltiades, conquered Eione, on the River Strymoii, and other 1 Plularclius in 'riiemistocle. 2 Lib. 1. 3 In Annal. Vet. Tostamenli sub anno Juliiin.-E Periodi, 4241. 4 i. c. To Iho reigns of Arta.\er.\es and his son Xer.xes, wliom the primate makes to rci'_'n one year after Him. 5 For these authors say, that Xer.xe3 reigned twenty-one years, and Artaxer.xcs reigned forty-one. Bu: accjrding to the primate, Xer.xes reigned but twelve years, and Arta.xerxcs fiP?}' 6 Diodorus Sicuhiu, lib. 11. Plutarchus in Cimone. 220 • CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF parts of Thrace, and then took in the islands of Scyrus and Naxus, which had revolted from them, and' while they were assaulting the last of these, Theiras- tocles passed by them, in his flight into Asia, and difficultly escaped falling ir.lo their hands. An. 470. Xerxes 16.] — The next year after, Cinjon,^ sailing from Athens w ith A fleet of two hundred sail, passed over to the coasts of Asia; where, having augmented it with one hundred sail more from the allies, he took in all the maritime parts of Caria and Lycia, driving the Persians o\it of all the cities they were possessed of in those parts; and then hearing that they had a great fleet on the coasts of Pamphylia, and were also drawing down thither as great an army by land for some expedition, he hastened thither with two hundred and fifty of his best ships in quest of them; and, finding their fleet, consisting of three huij- dred and fifty sail, at anchor in the rhouth of the River Eurymedon, anr" \i ^\x land army encamped on the shore by, he first assaulted their fleet, wnich, bt.lng soon put to the rout, and having no other way to fly but up the river, were all taken, every ship of them, and twenty thousand men in them, the rest having either escaped to land, or been slain in the fight. After this, while \v.% +orces were thus flushed with success, he put them ashore, and fell upon the Iw army, and overthrew them also with a great slaughter; whereby he got two great vic- tories in the same day, of which one was equal to that of Salamis, and the oth*^r to that of Platsea. And having gotten information, that there were eighty more Phoenician ships coming to join the Persian fleet, he surprised them in the har- bour, before they had any notice of the late defeat, and destroyed every ship of them; and all the men on board were either drowned or slain in the fight. After which success, Cimon returned home in great triumph, and very much enriched and adorned Athens with the spoils got in this expedition. An. 469. Xe7-xes 17.] — The next year Cimon sailed to the Hellespont;^ and falling on the Persians, who had taken possession of the Thracian Chersonesus, drove them out thence, and subjected their country again to the Athenians; though in truth (it having been the principality of his father Miltiades') he had the best right to it himself. After this he subdued the Thrasians, who had re- volted from the Athenians, and then landing his army on the opposite shore of Thrace, he seized all the gold mines on those coasts, and brought under him all that country as far as Macedon, and thereby opened a way for the conquering of that realm also, would he have pursued the opportunity: for the omitting of which he was afterward,^ on his return, brought to trial for his life before the Athenians, as if he had been corrupted by the Macedonians to spare them, and hardly escaped being condemned for it. Xerxes, being at last daunted and wholly discouraged by the continued series of so many losses and defeats, gave over all thoughts of any longer carrying on the Grecian war; and therefore, from this time,® no more of his ships were seen in the iEgean Sea, or any of his forces on the coasts adjoining to it, all the remainder of his reign. An. 465. Xerxes 21.] — After this, Xerxes giving himself wholly up to luxury and ease, minded nothing but the gratifying of his pleasures and his lusts; whereby growing into contempt Avith the people, Artabanus,^ the captain of his guards, and one who had been long in prime favour and authority with him, conspired against him, and having drawn Mithridates, one of his eunuchs that was his chamberlain, into the plot, by his means got into his bedchamber, and there slew him, while he slept in his bed; and then going to Artaxerxes his third son, acquainted him of the murder, and accused Darius his elder brother to be the author of it, telling him that it was done to make his way to the throne; that it was his design to cut him off" next to secure himself in it; and that there- fore it behoved him to look to himself. All Avhich Artaxerxes (as being then I Fliilanlms in Tln'niistoclf. •> Diod. et Plutarclitis, ibid. Thiicydides, lib. ». 3 PliitaiTlms in Cimone. 4 Herod, lib. 6. 5 Pint, in Cimone. 6 Ibid 7 <"teaias. Dindorus Siculiis, lib. 11. Justin, lib. 3. c. 1. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 221 a very young man) rashly believing, without any farther examination, to be true, and being irritated thereby in such a manner as Artabanus intended, went immediately to his brother's apartment, and there, by the assistance of Artaba- nus and his guards, slew him also. And this he did, as he thought, by way of just revenge for the death of his father, arid for the securing of his own safety, being imposed on and deceived by the craft of the traitor who excited him hereto. The next heir was Hystaspes, the second son of Xerxes; but he being absent in Bactria, of which province he was governor, Artabanus took Artax- erxes, as being next at hand, and put him on the throne; but with design to lei him sit on it no longer than till he had formed a party strong enough to seize i' for himself. He having been long in great authority, had made many creatures, and he had also seven sons, all grown up to be men of robust bodies, and ad- vanced to great dignities in the empire; and his confidence in these was that which put his ambition on this design: but while he was hastening it to a con- clusion, Artaxerxes, having got a full discovery of the whole plot, by the means of Megabyzus, who had married one of his sisters, was beforehand with him in a counterplot, and cut him oft' before his treason was fully ripened for execution: whereby, having secured himself in thorough possession of the kingdom, he held it forty -one years. He is said to have been the handsomest person of the age in which he lived, and to have been a prince of a very mild and generous disposition;- he is called by the Greek historians w^xpoj/Mp, or Longimanus (/. e. the Long-handed,) by reason of the more than ordinary length of his hands;' for they were so long, that on his standing upright, he could touch his knees with them. But in scripture he hath the name of Ahasuerus, as Avell as that of Artaxerxes, and was the same who had Esther for his queen. I acknowledge there are two very great men, whose opinions differ from me herein. Archbishop Ushei' and Joseph Scaliger. The former holdeth,'' that it was Darius Hystaspes that was the king Ahasu- erus who married Esther; and that Atossa was the Vashti, and Artystona the Esther of the holy scriptures. But all that is said of those persons by the his- torians who have written of them is wholly inconsistent herewith: for Herodotus positively tells us, that Artystona^ was the daughter of Cyrus, and therefore she could not be Esther: and that Atossa** had four sons by Darius, besides daughters, all born to him by her after he was king; and therefore she could not be that Queen Vashti, who was divorced from the king her husband in the third year of his reign," nor he that Ahasuerus that divorced her. Furthermore, Atossa is said to have had predominant interest with Darius even to the time of his death, that it was by her means that in the last act of his life,® he was influenced to settle the succession of his crown on Xerxes her son, to the disinheriting of all his elder sons, who were born to him by a former wife; whereas the Ahasuerus of the book of Esther, had removed Vashti both from his bed and from his pre- sence by an unalterable decree;^ and therefore never could admit her again to either, all his life after. That which chiefly induced the learned archbishop to be of this opinion was, that whereas it is said of Ahasuerus'" in the book of Esther, that he laid a tribute upon the land and upon the isles," the same is also said of Darius Hystaspes by Herodotus; and therefore he thought that they were both the same person. But Strabo, who is an author of as good, if not better credit, attributeth this to Longimanus.'" It must be acknowledged, that in the printed copies which we now have of that author, it is read Darius Lon- gimanus in the place which I refer to. But the title Longimanus, and tlio de- scription of the person after in that place added, can belong to none but to the Artaxerxes whom we now speak of; and therefore it is manifest, that there Darius is put instead of Artaxerxes, by the corruption of the text. Scaliger's opinion is,'^ that Xerxes was the Ahasuerus, and Hamestris his I Strabn, lib, 15. p. 735. 2 Plutarch, in Arta.xorxo Mnonione. 3 Pint, et Strabo, lb. 4 In Aiin;ilibiis Veteri.^ Testamenti. stibanno J. P. 4193. 5 Floroilot. lib. 3. ct lib. 7. 6 Herodot. lib. 7. sub initio. 7 Fsther i. 3. 8 Ilerndt. lib. " 9 Esther i. J!". JO Chap. \.\ U Ilcrodol. lib. 3. 1-i Strabo, lib. 13. p. 735. 13 De Etncndatioiie, lib. 0. 2SSI CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF queen, the Esther of the holy scriptures. His main reason for it is, the snnih- tude that is between the names of Hamestris and Esther. But how much more the dissimilitude of their characters proves the contrary, has been already shown; and what will be hereafter said of her dealing with Inarus and the Greeks, taken with him in Egypt, and her frequent adulteries, will be a farther confir- mation of it. Furthermore, it appears from Herodotus,' that Xerxes had a son by Hamestris that was marriageable in the seventh year of his reign; and there- fore it is impossible she could be Esther; for Esther was not married to Ahasu- erus'^ till the seventh year of his reign, nor could possibly have been taken into his bed sooner than two years before. For, according to the sacred history,^ it was the fourth year of Ahasuerus when the choice of virgins w^as made for him, and a whole year being employed in the purifications'* whereby they were pre- pared for his bed, she could not be called thither tiU the fifth year of his reign; and therefore the sixth was the soonest that she could have a son by him. Be- sides, Artaxerxes, the third son of Hamestris,^ being grown up to the state of a man at the death of his father (M^hich happened in the twenty-first year of his reign,) he must have been born before the sixth year of his reign. All which put together, do sufficiently prove, how much soever the names Esther and Hamestris may be alike, the persons could not be the same. But there being no such objections as to Artaxerxes Longimanus, it is most probable that he was the person. The ancientest and best evidences that can be had of this matter, are from the Greek version of the sacred text, called the Septuagint, the apocryphal additions to the book of Esther, and Josephus; and all these agree for Artaxerxes Longimanus. For Josephus*' positively teUs us it was he; and the Septuagint, through the whole book of Esther, wher- ever the Hebrew text hath Ahasuerus, translate Artaxerxes; and the apo- cryphal additions to that book every where call the husband of Esther, Artax- erxes, who could be none other than Artaxerxes Longimanus; for there are several circumstances related of him, both in the canonical and apocryphal Esther, which can by no means be applicable to the other Artaxerxes, called Mnemon. And Severus Sulpitius, and many other writers, as well of the ancients as the moderns, come also into this opinion. And the extraordinary favour and kindness^ which Artaxerxes Longimanus showed the Jews beyond all the other kings that reigned in Persia, first in sending Ezra and after Nehe- miah, for the repairing of the broken affairs of that people in Judah and Jeru- salem, and the restoring of them again to their ancient prosperity, is what car. scarce be accounted for on any othei reason, but that they had in his bosom such a powerful advocate as Esther to solicit for them. But these, and the other transactions of this king, will be the subject of the next ensuing book. BOOK V. An. 464. Artax. 1.]— Artaxerxes having, by the death of Artabanus, re- moved one grand obstacle to his quiet possessing of the throne, had still two others to struggle with, his brother Hystaspes in Bactria, and Artabanus's party at home. And this last being ncare'st at hand, gave him the first trouble: for although Artabanus* Avas dead, he had left behind seven sons, and many pai-ti- 1 De Einendatioiie. lib. 0. 2 Esther ii. Ki. 3 Esther ii. 4 Esther ii. 12. .5 Pioiior. Sic. lib. 11. <> Antiq. lib. 11. c. Ii. 7 There were two otlinr kings of Persia that showeil kiminoss to the Je\vs>. Cyrus and Darms Hystaspes. tanfc of them granted adocroe in favour of the Jews: hut Arta.xcrxcs went bejond them both; for he sranted two decrees, by virtue of which both the ecclesiastical and political state of the Jews were thoroughly restored; and therefore, where the scripture names those kings of I'ersia, by whoG-IJ. Usiierusin .Annalibussubanno.I. r.474C. Strauchiiit, aliique. 6 Christ suflernd at the time of the Passover, which was alw.tys celebrated in the middle of the month Nisan. 7 Ezra vii. 9. There it is said in the first month, and the first month of the Jewish year was Nisan. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 229 restore the church and state of the Jews; for that year of the Julian period ac- cording to Ptolemy's Canon, was the seventh year of that king's reign,' in which the scriptures tell us his commission was granted. The begirming, therefore, of the seventy weeks, or four hundred and ninety years, of this prophecy, was in the month Nisan of the Jewish year, in the seventh year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia, and in the four thousand two hundred and fifty- sixth year of the Juhan period, when Ezra had his commission; and the end of them fell in the very same month of Nisan, in the four thousand seven hundred and forty-sixth year of the Julian period, in which very year and very rnonth Christ our Lord suffered for us, and thereby completed the whole work of our salvation, there being just seventy weeks of years, or four hundred and ninety years, from the one to the otlier. V. It is evident, from the prophecy itself, that these weeks musi have this beginning, that is, from the date of the commission granted Ezra. For, 1st, They are pinned down thereto by an express character in the text; and, 2dly, They cannot, agreeable to that and other scriptures, and the authentic histories of the times to which they relate, have it any where else. And, 1st, These weeks must have their beginning from the date of the com- mission granted Ezra, because they are pinned down thereto by an express character in the text; and that character is "the going forth of the command- ment to restore and build Jerusalem;" for that from thence the seventy weeks must have their beginning,^ the text is very express; and, to excite us the more to observe it, introduceth it with this remarkable preface, " Know, therefore, and understand." But this commandment or decree was that which was granted to Ezra in that commission with which he was sent into Judea, in the seventh year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia; and therefore from thence the beginning of these weeks must commence. For the words in the text, "to restore and build Jerusalem," are not to be understood literally, but figuratively, for the restoring of the state of the Jews, as well the political as the ecclesias- tical, and the resettling of both, according to the law of Moses. And what is more usual in prophecies, than to be given out in figurative expressions? and what is more common in scripture, than by Jerusalem to mean the whole politi- cal and ecclesiastical state of that people? and for the re-establishing of both these, and the settling of them again upon the former basis, from whence they had been overthrown b}' the Babylonians, and were not as yet but very imper- fectly restored, the commission granted to Ezra was very full: for it gave him thorough power to restore the law of Moses, ^ and fully re-establish the obser- vance of it both in church and state, and to appoint magistrates and judges to govern the people according to it, and to punish all such as should be disobedient thereto, either with death, banishment, imprisonment, or confiscation of goods, according as their crimes should be found to deserve. And all this Ezra accord- ingly executed, in manner as will hereafter be related. Before his coming to Jerusalem with his commission, the scriptures were in a manner lost, the people in a profound ignorance of the law, and the worship of God neglected, and every thing else, both in church and state, in great disorder and confusion. But, on his coming, he restored the scriptures, instructed the people in the law, brought the worship of God into due order, and'proceeded, as long as his com- mission lasted, to work a full reformation in all things else. And after his com- mission was at an end, he gave not over his endeavours herein, but, as a priest, as a skilful scribe in the law of God, and as president of the Sanhedrin,'' he still carried on the sapie work; and having a successor equally zealous in the same design, he did as much in it under his authority as formerly he did by his own: so that he hath been esteemed as another Moses, and deservedly reckoned as the second founder of the Jewish church and state. And, therefore, the be- ginning of this work is a noble epocha from whence to begin the calculation i>t 1 Ezra vii. 7. 2 Dan. ix. 25. ■< See [he commission in the "thchapter of Ezra, ver. 11 — 26. 4 Neh. viii. 230 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF these weeks, and doth most agreeably accord with the intent and purpose of this prophecy, in which they are predicted: for the whole intent and purpose * of it is, to foreshow and set forth the age of the restored church of the Jews, how long it was to continue, and when to cease, and be abohshed; and from whence is it more proper to reckon this, .than fiom the time when the thorough restoration of it began? and this was then only begun, when Ezra, by virtue of the commission granted to him by Artaxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia, in the seventh year of his reign, did set about this work; and, therefore, from hence the computation of these weeks, according to the prophecy that predicts them, must begin. And, that this figurative interpretation of the words, and none other, must be the true meaning of them, appears from hence, that they cannot be understood in a literal sense; for, if they are so to be understood, they can be applicable to no other restoring and rebuilding of Jerusalem, than that which was decreed and commanded by Cyrus at the release of the captivity; for this prophecy was revealed to Daniel before this release: and, therefore, when it is said therein, that the epc^cha of these weeks was to begin from the going forth of the command or decree to restore and build Jerusalem, of what decree can it be more properly understood, than of that, which should first be granted next after this prophecy for that purpose, and by virtue whereof this city Avas accord- ingly rebuilt, after its having been destroyed by the Babylonians, and was again repeopled and inhabited by the same people who had been its former inhabi- tants? And that this was done by virtue of Cyrus's decree, appears from many places of scripture. We are told in Isaiah xliv. 28, that "it was Cyrus that should say to Jerusalem, Be thou built; and to the temple, Thy foundation shall be laid." And again (ch. xlv. 13,) it is said of the same Cyrus, that " God w^ould raise him up and direct him, that he should build his city, and release his captives;" where it is to be observed, that he that released God's captives, and laid the foundation of the temple, Avas to be the person that was to rebuild Jerusalem; so that he is not only by name, but also by this character and descrip- tion, plainly pointed out to be the person that was to do this Avork. For that Cyrus did release the captive Jews, who were God's people, and that he did no more than lay the foundation of the temple (for it was not perfected till in an after reign,) is well knoAvn. And therefore, according to these passages of holy scripture, it must be he only that did restore and rebuild Jerusalem. And so accordingly it Avas done by virtue of the decree Avhich he granted for the return of the Jcavs thither: for can it be imagined, that Cyrus should grant hcense for the Jews to return to Jerusalem, and rebuild the temple there, without allow- ing them to rebuild that city also? Ezra plainly tells us, that as soon as the JeAvs Avere returned into Judea by virtue of Cyrus's decree,' they dispersed themselves into the several cites to which they belonged, and again dwelt in them; and can it be thought that they did not then again rebuild them? For Avithout rebuilding of them, hoAV could they dwell in them? And if those Avho belonged to the other cities of Judah rebuilt, and dwelt in them again, hoAV can Ave think that those who belonged to Jerusalem did not do the same, and that especially since it was the metropolis of the whole nation, the place Avhere the temple stood, where all Avent up continually to Avorship, and where three times a year every male appeared before the Lord at the solemn festivals, and where also the Sjovernor dwelt, Avhere the council sat, and all matters of judgment w^ere ulti- mately decided? The matter is beyond all dispute; Avhen the Jews on their re- turn rebuilt their other cities, they must then most certainly have rebuilt Jerusalem also. The great concourse which the reasons I have mentioned constantly drew thither, must haA^e necessitated this, had there been no other inducement for it. It is easier to suppose all the rest of the cities of Judah to have been left still in their rubbish, after the return of the Jcavs from their captivity, than that this city alone should remain unbuilt. The rebuilding of it is not indeed expressly included in the commission of Cyrus. As we have it recorded in 1 Ezra ii. 1. iii. 1. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 231 the first chapter of Ezra, that only gives license "to the Jews to return into Judea, and there rebuild the house of" God which is in Jerusalem." But the license to rebuild the house of God which is in Jerusalem, must either implj a license to rebuild Jerusalem also, or else (which seems most probable) Ezra gives us, in the place mentioned, only an abstract of the chief things granted by that license, and not a recital of the whole, in which most likely many other things, and among them the rebuilding of Jerusalem, and the other cities of Judah, might be fully and expressly mentioned; for it is certain, by virtue of that license, they had power so to do; and accordingly executed it. For the complaint of the neighbouring nations to the Persian court against them that were returned was, that "they builded Jerusalem, that rebellious and bad city, and had set up the walls thereof, and joined the foundations of it;'" and the order from King Artaxerxes (so the Magian who then reigned, it seems, called himself) was, "to cause the Jews to cease, that this city be not builded."* However, from the first of Cyrus, till the time of this order, fourteen years having elapsed, the rebuilding of Jerusalem had by that time gone a great wa}^; for, within two j^ears after, we find the prophet Haggai complaining of the Jews at Jeru- salem, "that they dwelt in ceiled 'houses, while they let the house of God lie waste. "^ From all this it-plainly appears, that Jerusalem, after its having been destroyed by the Babylonians, was again rebuilt, by virtue of the decree which Cyrus granted, in the first year of his reign, for the release and restoration of the Jews. And therefore, if these words of the prophecy, "to restore and build Jerusalem," are to be understood in a literal sense, they can be under- stood of no other restoring and building of that city, than that which was ac- complished by virtue of that decree; and the computation of the seventy weeks must begin from the granting and going forth thereof. But if the computation be begun so high, the four hundred and ninety years of the said seventy weeks cannot come low enough to reach any of those events which are predicted by this prophecy; for, from the first of Cyrus to the death of Christ, were five hundred and sixty-eight years; and therefore, if the said four hundred and ninety years be computed from thence, they will be expired a great many years either before the cutting off or the coming of the Messiah, which ought both to fall within the compass of them, according to the express words of this pro- phecy. It evidently, therefore, follows from hence, that the words of this prophecy, "to restore and build Jerusalem," cannot be understood in a literal sense: for the sum of the whole argument is thus: — If the words are to be understood in a literal sense, they must be understood of that rebuilding of Je- rusalem which was accomplished by virtue of Cyrus's decree, and the compu- tation of the seventy weeks, or the four hundred and ninety years thereof, must begin from the going forth or issuing out of that decree. But it cannot begin from thence, for the reason mentioned; and therefore these words cannot be understood in a literal sense, but must be interpreted to mean figuratively the restoring and rebuilding the church and state of the Jews at Jerusalem. And this Ezra effected, by virtue of the command or decree which was granted to him, for this piu'pose, in the seventh year of Artaxerxes Longimanus; and therefore here the beginning of these weeks must be placed. And this will be farther proved, if we consider, •2(ily, That it can be placed no v/here else, so as to make the ending com- port v/ith the intent and purpose of the prophecy, and the accomplishing of the events predicted by it. For there v/ere four commandments or decrees is- sued out by, the kings of Persia in favour of the Jews, from one of which, ac- cording to the express words of the prophecy, the computation of these weeks is to be begun; the first granted by C\'rus,' in the first year of his reign; the second by Darius,^ about the fourth year of his reign; the third by Artaxerxes to Ezra,** in the seventh year of his reign; and the fourth by the same Artax- 1 Ezra iv. 12. 2 Ihid. iv. 21. 3 Haggai i. 4. 4 Ezra i. 5 Ibid. vi. 6 [biJ. vii. 232 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF erxes to Nehemiah/ in the twentieth year of his reign. But this computation could not begin from that of Cyrus, nor from that of the twentieth of Artax- erxes, and therefore it must begin from this of the seventh of Artaxerxes granted to Ezra. That it could not begin from any of the other three I shall show in their order. And, 1st, As to the decree of Cyrus, the four hundred and ninety years of these weeks cannot be computed from thence, for the reason already said, ihat is, because, if they begin from thence, they cannot, by a great many years, reach the events predicted by this prophecy, and therefore none* who under- stand this prophecy to relate .either to the cutting off. or the coming of the Mes- siah, do begin them from hence; for, according to this computation, no chro- nology can ever reconcile them to either of them. 2dly, Neither can the computation of these weeks be begun from the decree granted by Darius: but there having been three Darius's that reigned in Persia, Darius Hystaspes, Darius Nolhus, and Darius Codomannus, it is to be first in- quired, which of these three it was that granted this decree, and then, secondly, it shall be shown, that the computation of these weeks cannot be begun from it. And, first of these three Darius's, it is certain it could not be Darius Codo- mannus: for if the four hundred and ninety years of -these weeks be reckoned from any part of his reign, they will overshoot all the events predicted by this prophecy by many more years, than they will fall short of them, if reckoned from the first of Cyrus; and therefore no one hath ever said, that he was the Darius that granted this decree. But Scaliger, and many others following his authority, have said it of Darius Nothus. But there are invincible arguments against it, which unanswerably demonstrate, that it could not be Darius Nothus; but it must necessarily be Darius Hystaspes, the first of these three that reigned in Persia, and none other, by whom this decree was issued out: for he who, according to Ezra, granted this decree, is the same Darius of whom mention is made in Haggai and Zechariah;- but that Darius could not be Darius Nothus, but must necessarily be Darius Hystaspes. For, first, from the destruction of the temple of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans to the reign of Darius Nothus, were one hundred and sixty-five years: but from the destruction of it to the time of the second decree, by virtue of which the rebuilding of it was finished, were no more than seventy years, according to the prophet Zechariah. For we find in the book of his prophecies,* that in the fourth year of the same Darius who granted this decree to the JeAvs (which was also the year in which it was pub- lished at Jerusalem,) the fast of the fifth month, '' in which they had mourned for the destruction of the temple, and the fast of the seventh month,'' in which they had mourned for the utter desolation of the land, Avhich had been brought upon it by the death of Gedaliah, had been observed just seventy years; and no one can doubt, who thorougly considers that text, but that their mourning for these calamities had been from the very time that they had suffered them; and that therefore it could not be Darius Nothus, but it must be some other Darius then reigning in Persia, within the reach of the said seventy years, who granted this decree; and that since the fourth year of Darius Hystaspes was just seventy )-ears from the time in which the city and teinple of Jerusa- lem were destroyed by the Chaldeans (as hath been before observed,) this other Darius must necessarily be Darius Hystaspes. It must be acknowledged, that the same prophet speaks also in another place of the like number of seventy years in the second of Darius two years before. But these were not the se- venty years of mourning for the destruction of the city and temple of Jerusa- lem, but the seventy 3^ears'' in which God had expressed his indignation against 1 Nphr>ni. ii. 2 Ezra v. ]. vi. 14. Haggai i. 1—15. Zech. i. 1—7. .inil vii. 1. 3 Zecli. vii. 5. 4 2 Kifies xxv. 8. Jer. Hi. 12. The Jews observe this fast on the iiinlliof Ab, which is their fitth month, even m this day. 5 2 Kinffs xxv. 2.5. Jer. xli. 1. The Jews observe this fast on the third day of Tisri, which istlifii seventk month, even to this day; and both these fast days, that of the third of Tisri, and the other of the iiinihof Ab «re marked on thosn days in all their caleiul.-irs. 6 Zech. i. 12. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 033 Jerusalem and the cities of Judah; Avhich are to be computed from the time that Nebuchadnezzar came up against Judah,' and besieged Jerusalem, for which the Jews fasted in the tenth month: and this was two years before that city was taken and destroyed by him. For the taking and destroying of Jeru- salem was in the eleventh of Zedekiah: but the first besieging of it was in the ninlli yt-ar of Zedekiah,' and in the tenth month of that year. But Scaliger,' instead of being convinced by this argument, turns it to speak for him; and his reasonings upon it for this purpose are, that these fasts, which are spoken of rn Zechariah' to have been observed on the fourth and fifth month, and on the seventh month, and the tenth month, could not be appointed but by the church of the Jews (by which I suppose he meaneth the Sanhedrin, or some other convention of priests and elders representmg that church.) But neither the Sanhedrin, or any other convention representing that church, could come toge- ther, or make any such constitution after the calamities which these fasts com- memoi-ated, till the Jews were returned from their captivity, and again settled in Judah and Jerusalem; and therefore these fasts could not begin to be ob- served, nor the seventy years observing of them, which Zechariah speaks of, commence till after that time. But seventy years from any time after the re- turn of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity will carry us much beyond the reign of Darius Hj'staspes; and therefore it could not be the fourth year of Da- rius Hystaspes, but it must be the fourth year of the Darius, the next of that name, who reigned after him in Persia (and that Avas Darius Nothus,) in which these fasts were spoken of by that prophet. But the answer to all this is, that there was no need of any such formal constitution of the whole Jewish church for the observing of these fasts. The calamities which they commemorated, while fresh in memory, might be reason enough to introduce the use of them by common consent; and if not, yet what should hinder, but that the priests and elders might meet together in Babylon, while there in captivity, and in that place, as well as if they had been at Jerusalem, hold conventions for the making of such a constitution? If the book of Baruch be to be credited in any thing,' that tells us of such a convention in Babylon, held there in the time of the captivity, and of a fast appointed by it. And we find in the book of Eze- kiel, which is of undoubted, because of divine authority, that the elders of Is- rael in Babylon* met more than once to ask counsel of God from the mouth of the prophet. And when Sherezer and Regem-Melech® came to Jerusalem to ask counsel of the prophets and priests there, in the name and behalf of the Jews of Babylon, about these fasts, can w-e think that they w-ere sent by any other than a convention of the priests and elders in that place met together for this purpose? It is certain, that most of the constitutions that are now observed by the Jews^ were made in the land of Babylon, by conventions of their elders, aftei- the last destruction of Jerusalem (for all that are in the Babylonish Gemara were there made.) And why then might not a constitution for these fasts be made there also by a like convention, after the first destruction of that city? And wiiy there might not be a Sanhedrin in Babylon, during the captivity of the Jews, I cannot see. The temple-service was indeed confined to Jerusa- lem; but the Sanhedrin was no part of it. That was a national council which might be assembh^l wherever the nation was. And, therefore, when the whole nation of the Jews was removed into the land of Babylon, who can give a rea- son why this national council should not be there also, and there meet and 1 2 Kings XXV. 1. .I< r. xxxi-c. 1. lii. 4. Tlip .lows observ.! this fast in tlm tentli dav m thence, the first of ihcni will end in the very year ;n which, Diodorus tells us, Themistocles made his flight, t. e. in the second year of the seventy-seventh Olym piad. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 243 out have also cut them short three years and a half in the ending, by placing the death of Christ in the middle of the last week, and there concluding this part of the prophecy three years and a half before these seventy weeks are fully completed; which hath this great objection against it, that it drops the latter half part of the last week as void, and of no significancy. But no w^ord of God is given in vain; every part hath its significancy, and every word of prophecy therein contained must have its completion. For what our Saviour' saith of the law is also true of the prophets; and, as not one jot or tittle of the former was to pass Avithout being fulfilled, so neither can any one jot or tittle of the latter ever pass away without being accomplished. And therefore, every part of the last week of this prophecy, that is, the last half part as well as the first half part, must have its significancy, and also its completion; and, accord- ingly, every part of it had, as well as all the rest, as shall be hereafter shown. B}' all this it appears, that none of those ways which have been taken for the computing of those seventy weeks from the twentieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, can make it agree with the prophecy, and therefore it cannot be begun from thence. That which hath made so many fond of beginning the computation of these weeks from the twentieth year of this king, and the is- suing out of the commission then granted by him to Nehemiah, is the agreea- blcness which they think is between the prophecy and this commission, be- yond what they find in any of the three other grants or commissions above mentioned; for the prophecy placeth the beginning of the seventy weeks at the going forth of the commandment to restore and build Jerusalem, and after- ward makes mention of the building of the streets and the walls thereof; and both these, they say, were rebuilt by Nehemiah, by virtue of the grant made to him in the twentieth year of this Artaxerxes. To this I answer, 1st, That Ezra, thirteen years before this grant made to Nehemiah,^ speaks of a wall in Jerusalem given to the Jews by the favour of the king of Persia; and therefore this, if literally taken, may imply, that the grant made to Ezra included a li- cense or commission to build such a wall, as well as that made by Nehemiah. But if it be said, that the wall mentioned by Ezra, in the place which I refer to, is to be taken figuratively (as I acknowledge it is,) my reply hereto is: — And why may not then the word wall in the prophecy be taken figuratively also, there being as much reason for it in the one place as there is in the othej^ But, 2dly, There is no such word as the xoall to be found in the original text of the prophecy; for Avhat we there render, in our English translation, the wall, is, in the Hebrew original, the ditch. 3dly, That though Nehemiah did much en- large Jerusalem, by bringing new colonies of the Jews thither out of the coun- try, and obliging them to build tlieraselves houses and dwell there, yet this en- larging of the city cannot be called the restoring and rebuilding of it; for it was restored and rebuilt long before, and had many streets and ceiled houses again erected in it,' by virtue of the decree granted by C^^rus, as hath been above shown. And after that, from time to time, many more were added to them, by virtue of the same decree, confirmed by Darius Hystaspes many years be- fore Nehemiah came to be governor of Jndea. 4thly, The rebuilding or re- pairing of the walls of Jerusalem, accomplished by Nehemiah, was a work but of fifty-two days,' and the enlarging of Jerusalem with new colonies was within a year after;* but the restoring and rebuilding of Jerusalem, predicted by the prophecy, was to be a work of seven weeks, or forty-nine years, and so long, first Ezra, and after Nehemiah, laboured successively in the work of restoring and rebuilding the church and state of the Jews at Jerusalem, as will hereafter be shown: and therefore of this restoring and rebuilding only can the prophecy be understood. And thus far having shown that the commandment or decree, mentioned in the prophecy for the restoring and rebuilding of Jerusalem, cannot be understood either of the decree of Cyrus, or that of Darius, or of that granted to Nehemiah 1 Matt. V. 18. 2 Ezra ix. 9. 3 Haggai i. 4. 4 Nehem. vi. 15. 5 Ibid. vii. 244 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes, it remains, that it must then be understooa of that granted to Ezra by the same Artaxerxes, in the seventh year of his reign, and of none other. For, besides the three commandments or decrees above mentioned, there was no other commandment or decree ever gi-anted by any of the kings of Persia for the restoration of the Jews in Judah and Jerusa lem, after the Babylonish captivity, but this only that was granted to Ezi-a. And therefore, if it cannot be understood of any of the other three, it must then ne- cessarily be this fourth, and none other. And from thence to the death of Christ are exactly four hundred and ninety years to a month; for in the month Nisan was the decree granted to Ezra, and in the middle of the same month Nisan,' Christ suffered just four hundred and ninety years after. VI. And thus much being said for the fixing of the beginning and ending of these. seventy weeks, it remains that, for the fuller explication of all other particulars that are in this prophecy contained, I farther observe, that the whole of it, as delivered to us in Daniel ix. 24 — 27, contains three branches or parts: the first foretells events to be accomplished within seventy weeks in general, smd to be fully completed and brought to pass at the end of them; the second, events to be accomplished precisely at the end of three particular periods, into which the said general number of seventy weeks is divided; and the third, events to be brought to pass after the expiration of the said seventy weeks in the times immediately following thereupon. I. The first branch or part of this prophecy is that which is contained in the twenty-fourth verse, and foretells the six events above mentioned, which were to be accomplished within the said seventy weeks in general, and to be fully completed and brought to jmss at the end of them. II. The second branch or part of this prophecy is that which is contained in the twenty-fifth verse, and in the former parts of the twenty-sixth and twenty- seventh verses. This divides the general number of seventy weeks into three particular periods, and assigns particular events to be precisely accomplished at the end of each of them. These three particular periods are seven weeks, six- U^-two weeks, and one week, that is, forty-nine years, four hundred and thirty- four years, and seven years; and the particular events to be accomplished at the end of each of them are, 1st, The restoring and building of the street and ditch f Jerusalem in troublous times; 2dly, The coming of the Messiah; and, 3dly, His confirming of the covenant of the gospel, v.^ith many of the Jews, for one week, his causing sacrifice and oblation to cease in the half of that week, and his being cut off at the end thereof. And, therefore, applying these particular events to their proper periods, the prophecy will be clearly thus: — That, numbering the said seventy Aveeks from the going .forth of the command- ment or decree to restore and build Jerusalem (that is, to restore and establish tlie church and state of the Jews at Jerusalem,) there should be first seven weeks of that number, that is, forty-nine years, and then the said church and state (here figuratively expressed by the streets of the city) should be thoroughly reformed and restored, and aU such good constitutions and establishments^ (here figuratively expressed by the ditch) should be made and settled, as should be necessary, for the fortifying and preserving of the same; and that all this should be done in troublous times, and amidst great opposition from enemies. That, after sixty-two weeks from the end of the said seven weeks, that is, four hun- dred and thirty-four years, the Messiah should come; and that, after this, hav- ing for one week, the last of the said seventy weeks (that is, for the space of seven years,) confirmed the covenant of the gospel with many of the Jews) he should, in the half part of that week (that "is, in the latter half part of it, 1 For Christ was crucilicil in the beginning of the Jewish Passover, and that always began in the miiiille of the month Nisan. 2 It is a celebrated saying amcmg the Jews, and of ancient date anion? them (for it is in Pirke Abolh. which is one of the tracts in their Mishna,) " That the constitutions of their elders are a hedge to the law,'-' that is, to fence, preserve, and keep it, from being broken in upon and violated. But a ditch is as much made ass of for a fence as is a bedoo; and therefore, the constitutions whicli fence the law from being violated nia» be figuratively expressed by the one as well as by the other. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 245 '•/ause the sacrifices and oblations of the temple to cease, and, in the conclu- sion of the whole, that is, in the precise ending of the said seventy weeks, bo cut off and die. And, accordingly, all this was exactly fulfilled and brought to pass. 1st, As to the period of seven weeks, it must be acknowledged, that the particular event of restoring and building of Jerusalem, with its streets and ditch, in troublous times (by which I understand the restoring and settling of the church and state of the Jews,) is not distinctly applied thereto in the pro- phecy: for, in the end of the twenty-fifth verse, both the two first periods be- ing mentioned together, i. e. that of the seven weeks, and that of the sixty- two weeks, the event of restoring and building of Jerusalem, with its street and ditch, is subjoined to both of them, without any distinct application to either; but the words immediately following in the next verse, appropriating the time of the Messiah to the period of sixty-two weeks, this necessarily leaves the other, that is, l!.e restoring and building of Jerusalem, with its streets and ditch, to be appropriated to the period of seven weeks. And accordingly, within the compass of the said period of seven weeks, or forty-nine years, this event was accomplished, in the full restoring and establishing of the church and state of the Jews in Judah and Jerusalem, after the Babylonish captivity: for this was begun by Ezra, by virtue of that commandment or decree which was granted to him for it, in the seventh year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia, and afterward carried on by Nehemiah, by virtue of another decree granted to him, for this pur]oose, by the same Artaxerxes, in the twentieth year of his reign. And, from the beginning of this restoration of the church and state of the Jews by Ezra, to the ending and perfecting of it by Nehemiah, in that last act of this reformation which is spoken of in the thirteenth of Nehe- miah (that is, from the twenty-third verse to the end of the chapter,) were forty-nine years, as will be clearly made out, in its proper place, in the sequel of this history: for, during all that time this work was carrying on, and the great opposition which these two good men met with herein, not only from the Samaritans and other enemiesabroad, but also from false brethren and M'icked men at home, who hated all reformation, was the true cause that it was so long doing; and that there were such oppositions in the doing of it, this sufficiently verifieth the prophecy in its prediction, that it was to be done in troublous times. And it is observable, that, at the same juncture of time where the re- storation of the Jewish church and state ended, there the holy scriptures of the Old Testament do end also; for this last reformation of Nehemiah, which I have mentioned, and where I place the full completion of the said restoration, is the last act which is recorded therein; and therefore, this ending of the period is of sufficient remark for this reason, as well as the other, to be taken notice of in the prophecy; which can scarce be said of any other that is assigned for it. And,— 2dly, From these seven weeks, or forty-nine years, reckoning sixty-two weeks, or four hundred and thirty-four years more (which is the term of the second period,) this will lead us down to the coming of Christ, the Messiah, who is here in the projihecy predicted to come at the end of the said sixty- two weeks. For the words of the prophecy are, " From the going forth of the ccmmandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince, shall be seven weeks and threescore and two weeks;" that is, there shall be seven Aveeks for the completing and finishing of the work for which that com- mandment or decree was granted, and from thence sixty-two weeks more to the coming of Christ, the Messiah, here intended, that is, to the time of his first appearance on the ministry of the gospel. For his coming here predicted, must be interpreted, either of his coming at his birth, or of his coming on his ministry. No one salth it of the former, neither will the term of years predicted of it ever meet it there: and therefore, it must be understood of the latter, that e. his coming and first appearing in his ministry; and here the years predicted 246 CONNEXION OF THh HISTORY OF in the prophecy will exactly find it; for the seventh year of Artaxerxes Longi- manus, from whence these weeks do begin, being coincident with the year of the Julian period 4^56, if we reckon from thence seven weeks and sixty-two weeks, that is, sixty-nine weeks, or four hundred and eighty-three years, this will lead us down to the year of the Juhan period 4739, which w-as the very year in which the ministry of the gospel first began. This Christ executed at first, and therein made his appearance as the Messiah, by his forerunner, John the Baptist, for the space of three years and a half, and alter that by himself, in his own person, for three years and a half more. And these two being put to- gether make up the last week of this prophecy, which began exactly at the ending of the said sixtj'-two weeks. And therefore, here this prophecy con- cerning the coming of the Messiah had its completion. St. Luke' tells us, " The word of God first came to John in the fifteenth year of Tiberius CjEsar," empe- ror of Rome. And from the coming of that word to John, and his preaching of it to the Jews," was the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, and the first appearance of his kingdom here on earth. And this Christ himself tells us; for his words are (Luke xvi. 16,) " The law and the prophets were until John; since that the kingdom of God is preached." That is, the Jewish economy, under the law and the prophets, lasted until the coming of John, and his preach- .ng of the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins. But, from the time of his coming on this ministr)', which was the ministry of the gospel, the king- dom of the Messiah began. For as, in the gospel of St. Matthew by the king- dom of heaven, so here by the kingdom of God,^ is meant the kingdom of Ihe Messiah, the church of Christ, which he I.ath here established among us. And therefore, this kingdom thus beginning with the preaching of John, there must we necessarily place the first coming of that king, Christ our Lord, who founded this his kingdom here among us. And this was, as hath been said, in the fif- teenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar. But here it is to be observed, that this fifteenth year of Tiberius could not be his fifteenth year from the death of Augustus, his predecessor; for then there would have been but four years for the ministry of John the Baptist and the personal ministry of Jesus Christ put both together; which time would have been too narrow a space for the actings which are recorded of them in the gospel. Besides, in so short a time as must be allowed to the ministry of John in this case, it is not likely that he could have acquired that great fame; as appears not only by the gospels, "* but also from the writings of Josephus the historian,^ that he had obtained, not only in Judea and Galilee, but also through all the circumjacent regions before his death. The fif- teenth year, therefore, of the reign of Tiberius,*' in which John the Baptist began to preach, must be reckoned from that time when he began to reign jointly with Augustus, and was, according to Velleius Paterculus^ and Suetonius,* admitted by him into co-partnership with him in the empire; and, by a law (which Au- gustus caused to be proposed and enacted by the consuls) had conferred on him an equal power in tihe government of the provinces w'ith Augustus himself: for from that time the public acts went in his name, as well as in that of Augustus, especially in the imperial provinces, of which Syria Avas one:" and therefore from that time the years of his reign were reckoned in those provinces. And this happened,'" as the most learned Archbishop Usher observes, in the year of the Julian period 4725; and the fifteenth year from thence brings us to the year of the Julian period 47'39, in which (as is above noted,) the word of God came to John the Baptist; and the preaching of the gospel first began. And then it was that Christ, by this his forerunner, manifested his coming, and made his 1 Chap. iii. 1,2. 2 Mark i. 1. 3 Vide Grotii .Aiinotaliones in secundum caput MatthiEi, ft Liehtfooti Horns Hebraicas ad cundem locum 4 Matt. iii. xiv. 5. xxi. 2r.. 5 Antiq. lib. J8. c. 7. C Luke iii. 1. 7 Lib. 2. c. 121. Ubi verba faciens de Tiberlo hwc habet.— " Scnatus populusquc Ron'ianus postulante patre ejus (so. Augusto) ut a-quum ei jus in omnibus provinciis exercitibusque esset, quaui ernl ipsi, decrelo corn- plexus est." 8 In Tiberio, c. 21. Ubi de Tibnrio dicit " Lege per consults lata, ut provincias cum Augusto foirnauMtcl administraret, simulque censuin ageret, conditoluslro in Illyriciini profectus est." 0 Die Cassius. 10 In Annalibus sub anno J. P. 4723. THE OLD AND l^EVV TESTAMENT. 247 first appearance in that great work of our salvation, on which he was sent, j^nd from the seventh year of Artaxerxcs Longimanus, when the commandment went forth from that king for the restoring of the church and state of the Jews, to this time, were just seven weeks, and sixty-two weeks, that is, sixty-nine weeks, or four hundred and eighty-three years in all, exactly as this prophecy predicted. •3dly, From this coming of our Saviour begn a the third period of these seven- ty weeks, that is, the one week, which is .s.^oken of in the twenty-seventh verse; the events whereof, as there predicted, are, that " for that week the Mes- siah should confirm the covenant with many, and in the half part thereof (foi thus it ought to be rendered,' where in our English translation we read the midst) should cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease." And so accordingly it came to pass; for, during these seven years of his evangelical ministry, he did, first by his forerunner,'* the messenger whom he had sent before him, and then by himself, in his personal ministry, confirm the covenant of the gcspekwith many of the Jews, who were converted, and admitted thereto; and then, in the half part of the said week, that is, in the last half part thereof, when he ap- peared in his own person in the same ministry on which John was sent before him, he caused the sacrifices and the oblations of the temple to cease, that is, first by his preaching of the gospel, which was to supersede them; and then, lastly, by that great sacrifice of himself, which he once offered for all, in his death upon the cross, at the end of this week, whereby they were all absolutely and finally extinguished for ever. For all other sacrifices and oblations till then being only antitypes and figurative representations of this great sacrifice after to be offered, and of no virtue or efficacy, but as they referred to it, when this fvas offered, all others vanished of course, as the representative doth at the ap- pearance of the principal, or the type or figure at the presence of the thing that is typified or expressed by it; and the virtue and propitiation of this one sacri- fice hath sufficed for all ever since. The Avhole latter part of the last week being the time of Christ's personal ministry here on earth, as the whole of it was employed in the preaching of the gospel, which was to cause the law to cease; so the whole of it may very properly be said to be employed in causing all those sacrifices and oblations to cease which the law enjoined; though the whole was not completed till at the end of this half part, by his death and pas- sion; for then, at the offering up of this great sacrifice, the virtue and efficacy of all others ceased for ever. But here it may be objected, that my placing the death of Christ at the end of this last period is against the express words of the prophecy; for that placeth the cutting off the Messiah at the end of the second period, that is, of the sixty-two weeks; for the words, of it are, (ver. 26,) " After threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off." To this I answer, he word after in this place cannot be understood to mean strictly the time im- mediately after, but in a large and indefinite sense to denote the whole next week which after followed; for otherwise his coming and his cutting off must lave happened at the same time both together, and no intermediate space would .lave been left for his ministry: for in the verse preceding it is positively said, ' That from the going forth of the commandment, to restore and build Jerusa- lem, unto the Messiah the Prince, should be seven weeks and threescore and two weeks;" and therefore, if at the end of the same sixty-two weeks he should be cut off also, then his coming and his cutting off must have happened boll together at the same time; and the consequence, which I have mentioned, must necessarily follow, i. c. that no intermediate space would have then been left for his ministry; which cannot be said. The word after must therefore mean the whole week after; at the end of which Christ, the l\tessiah named in that prophe- cy, was cut olfby his death <^\ the cross. And there is no need of expressing it otherwise in that place, because the cutting off and death of the Messiah had 1 The word in the original Hebrrw is chatii, whiclisigniQcth tho half part, and not the mijil. 2 Maladii iii. 1. Matt. xi. 10. huke i. 70. vii. 27. MS CONNEXION OF "f HE HISTORY OF been exactly determined to that time by what was said before in the twenry- fourth verse. For it is manifest, that, according to the true intent and meaning of that part of the prophecy, his death must be there placed; for, accordins: to that, it must be there placed where it placeth the events that were to be accom- plished and brought to pass by it: but the events which were to be accomplished and brought to pass by the cutting off the Messiah, are by that part of the said prophecy (ver. 24,) placed at the end of the seventy weeks, and consequently, at the end of the last of them; and therefore, the cutting off of the Messiah must there be placed also. And there it accordingly happened in the death and passion of Christ our Saviour; and this part of the projihecy was exactly fulfilled by it. The whole therefore of this second part or branch of the prophecy is thus: the seventy Aveeks being divided into three periods, that is, into seven weeks, sixty-two weeks, and one week; the first reached from the time of the going forth^of the commandment to Ezra, for the restoring of the church and state of the Jews, in the seventh year of Artaxerxes Longimanus, to the finishing of that work by Nehemiah, forty-nine years after; the second, from the ei)d of that period to the coming of the Messiah, four hundred and thirty-four years after; and the last from that his coming, to his cutting off by his death on the cross: Avhich was one week, or seven years after. And all these put to- gether fully make up the seventy weeks, or the four hundred and ninety years of this prophecy; and according to this computation every particular of it hath been fully verified in the completion exactly agreeable thereto, and the whole number of years pointed out thereby exactly answered to a month: for as the going out of the commandment to Ezra, fiom whence they began, was in the month of Nisan, so the crucifixion of Christ v/as also in the same month, just four hundred and ninety years after. III. After what is predicted of these three periods, follows the third branch, or part of the prophecy which is contained in the latter end of the twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh verses, and foretells events to be brought to pass, after the ex- piration of the said seventy weeks, in the times immediately following there- upon; that is, "the destruction of the city and sanctuary by the people of the prince that was to come," who, with their armies, and desolating abominations, should invade Judea, as with a flood, and' by a terrible and consuming war bring utter ruin and desolation upon it, and all the people of the Jews that should dwell therein, and consummate the same upon them in an absolute de- struction. All which accordingly came to pass, and did, in a very signal man- ner, verify the prophecy in a full completion of every particulaij hereof. For on the end of these seventy weeks which were determined upon that people, and their holy city, they having slain the Lord of life, they were thereon cast off by God from being his peculiar people, and the Gentiles were called in their stead; so that thenceforth they were no more his people, nor their city 7crusa- lem any longer holy unto him, but both were given up and destined to uttei ruin and destruction: for, immediately on their having executed the sentence of death upon Christ our Lord, this sentence of condemnation passed upon them;' and from that time all second causes operated toward the hastening the execution of it, till at length the Roman armies, the people that were to come, under the command of Titus tlielr prince, invaded them as with a torrent and beffirt Jerusalem with their ensio-ns, " the abomination of desolation,"'- which our Saviour from this prophecy forewarns his disciples of. For^ they were idolatrous images,"' abominated by the Jews, under which those people marched 1 Christ fnroknnwiiiK the wickodness. foretells that this sentence should be thereon passed upon them for it, and accordingly he executed. Malt. xiv. Mark xiii. Luke xxi. 2 Matt. xxiv. 15. Mark xiii. 14. U Vide Grotii Aniiotutiones ail 2-1. cap. Matt. coin. 15. 4 Josephus tells us (Anliq. lib. 18. c. 7,1 that when Vitellius, governor of Syria, was going to pass through Judea with a Roman army to make war a^'ainst the Arabians, the chief of the Jews met him, ami earnestly entreated him to lead his army another way: for they could not bear the sight of those images which were in tlie ensigns under which they marched, they were so abominateil by them. These ensigns therefore, for the sake ofthn.se ii \a2es in ih'^ni. were abominaiiona to the Jews; and. by reason of tho (in-;.iinJi.i'i>; which wer« THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 2i'> ao^a^nst them, invaded their land, besieged their holy city, and by a most ••a- lamitous war, brought utter desolation upon both; which, according to the reJ,:- *ions of Josephus (who was an historian of their own nation, and present in all the actions of the war,) they executed in the most terrible and tragical mannei of destruction that was ever brought upon any nation, and consummated it to such a degree upon them, that they have never been able to recover themselves ever since even to this day, though now one thousand six hundred and forty- five years have passed since these judgments were by the just hand of God thus executed upon them. But, for the full clearing of all that hath hitherto been said in the explica- cation of this prophecy, there still remains one great objection to be answered. For it is urged, that the Artaxerxes who granted the commission to Ezra in the seventh year of his reign, from whence we begin the computation of the seventy weeks, was the same Artaxerxes who, in the twentieth year of his reign, granted another commission to Nehemiah; for the scriptures' making Ezra and Nehe- miah contemporary, render this beyond dispute. But that this Artaxerxes should be Artaxerxes Longimanus, the age which Nehemiah and Sanballat must then have lived to, makes it, they say, wholly improbable: for Nehemiah, in the book of the holy scriptures called by his name (which all acknowledge to have been written by him,)'" speaking of the reign of Darius Codomannus, king of Persia, and of the days of Jaddua the high-priest of the Jews, as of times past, he must have been alive after the death of both of them; but Jaddua not dying till two years after the death of Alexander the Great,^ in the year of the Julian period A'SQi, from the twentieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus to that time, had passed one hundred and twenty-three years: to which, if we add thirty years more for the age of Nehemiah, when he came to be governor of Judea (which is the least that can be allowed to qualify him for such a ti-ust,) he must have been at the least one hundred and fifty-three years old when he wrote that book, if the Artaxerxes, from whom he had his commission, were Artaxerxes Longimanus. And though we suppose the writing of this book to have been while Darius Codomanus and Jaddua Avere both alive, and put it up as high as we can, that is, into the first year of the reign of that Darius, yet this will not much mend the matter; for, on this supposition, Nehemiah must have been one hundred and forty years old when he wrote that book; which is still a very im- probable age in those times, and consequently, infers the supposal on which it is built (^. e. that it was Artaxerxes Longimanus from wdiom he had his com- mission) to be very imprcbable also. And the age of Sanballat, upon the same supposal, will not only be as improbable, but also much more so; for when Ne- hemiah came into Judea, in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes, he found him governor of Samaria,^ under the king of Persia, and he was alive, as Josephus tells us,^ till the besieging of Gaza, by Alexander the Great, in the fourth year of Darius Codomauus, at which time he died. And therefore, if that Artaxerxes were Artaxerxes Longimanus, Sanballat, at the time of that siege, could not be less than one hundred and forty-eight years old: for from the twentieth of Ar- taxerxes Longimanus to the fourth of Darius Codomanus, according to Ptolo- my's C&ir.yi, were one hundred and thirteen years; and when Nohemiah ceme to Jerusalem, Sanballat having hetn for some time, perchance for several ye is, fixed in the government of Samaria, he cannot be well supposed to have been less than thirty-five years old at that time; and putting both these numbers to- gether, they make one luuidred and forty-eight years; and both these ages, tliat is, that of Nehemiah and this of Sanballat, it must be acknowledged, seem very improbable, and most especially that of the latter: for as to Nehemiah, an ex- traordinary blessing upon that good man may be alleged for such an extraor'i- wrniiffht iinMei them by the iloman armies in conquered countries, they were called desolating abnminalirn ox alviitijjiatio.is of desolation; and they were never more so than when under them the Roinin ;irTnM-i. U sifcged, took, and destroyeti., lit). 11. c. 5. 7 Nehem. ii. 1. 8 Ibid. vi. 15. 9 Antiq. lib. II. c "» P )i5i CONNEXION OF tAe HISTORY OF sephus tells us, Sanballat attended Alexander in the camp, and had eight thou- sand of his Samaritans there with him, who being the main strength and flower of that people, it is wholly improbable that, in their absence, those who were left behind should have capacity enough to undertake, or hands enouo-h to gcv through with such a work, especially when the chief projector, Sanballat him- self, by whose direction all was to be done, was absent also. It being therefore utterly improbable, if not altogether impossible, that this temple could have been built by a license from Alexander, in the lifetime of Sanballat, it must follow, that if it were built at all by virtue of such a license from Alexander, it must have been built by the Samaritans after Sanballat was dead. But the ill circum- stances in which the Samaritans wi'^'e with Alexander immediately after the time when Josephus saith Sanballat died, and the great misfortunes which they thereon fell into, make this as improbable as the former: for Alexander was no sooner gone into Egypt, where he immediately marched after his tak'.ng of Gaza, but the Samaritans,' rising in a mutiny against Andromachus, a favourite of his, whom he had left governor of Syria, set tire to the house where he was, and burned him to death; which justly pi-ovoked Alexander to' so severe a re- venge against them, that, on his return, he put a great number of them to death, expelled all the rest of them out of their city, and gave it to be inhabited by a colony of his Macedonians, and added their country to that of the Jews.^ And as to the eight thousand men Avhich had followed I -s camp,^ he sent them into Thebais, the remotest province of Egypt, and ther^ pcttled them on such lands as he caused to be distributed among them in that province, without suffering them any more to return into their own country. The remainder that survived this ruin were permitted to dwell in Sechem, a small village near Samaria, which hath from that time been the head seat of that people; and there they have remained ever since, even unto this day. And whether a people, who had in so high a degree provoked Alexander, should be allowed to build such a temple by his favour, or, if they had, could at all be in a capacity, when thus broken and ruined, to accomplish it, is an easy question to answer. Whoever shall consider this in both its branches, will, no doubt, think it in each of them improbable; and that, with a license from Alexander, neither before the death of Sanballat, nor after it, could any such temple have been built by the Samari- tans. However, I deny not, but that, as hath been already said, such a temple was built by Sanballat upon Mount Gerizim, and upon the occasion mentioned, that is, of the marriage of his daughter with a son of the high-priest of the Jews. But this was done long before the time of the last Darius, who M'^as called Codo- mannus, in the time of a former Darius, surnamed Nothus, who was king of Per- sia, eighty-eight years before him; for it appears from scripture, that this marriage was consummated while Joiada the son of Eliashib was high-priest of the Jews,* and he entered on his office in the eleventh year of this Darius; and four years afterward (that is, in the fifth year of the high-priesthood of the said Joiada, and in the fifteenth year of Darius Nothus) was it, that his son was thus married to the daughter of Sanballat, as will be hereafter shown in its proper place. And upon this marriage followed all the rest which Josephus relates of the building of the temple upon Mount Gerizim by Sanballat, and the making of his son-in-law high-priest of it. So that all this Avas done, not in the time of Darius Codomannus, in the last year of his reign, or by license from Alex- ander, but in the time of Darius Nothus, and by license from him only granted in the fifteenth year of his reign to Sanballat for this purpose. And this clears the- whole objection: for Darius Nothus, in Ptolemy's Canon, imme- diately succeeded Artaxerxes Longimanus, in whose twentieth year Sanbal- lat is first made mention of; and supposing him then to have been thirty-five years old, he would, in the fifteenth year of Darius Nothus, be no moie than 1 Eiisebii Chronicoii ad aniuim 1685. In Lat. Ilicroiivini, p. 137. in Grajcis. p. 50. 177 edit ull -'-'" 'ApTu^ipis^, which may be rendered in English, either of the other Artaxerxes, or of another Ar- taxerxes: and, to justify the emendation, he brings the authority of Rufhnus, who, in his version of Josephus, translates this place as if the copy which he used had it tou :.x;..oj 'Afr:/.|;f^,;u. But Ruffinus's Latin version is no sufficient stan- dard whereby to judge of the original, since in many places he fantastically varies from it. And since there were two Artaxerxes' that reigned in Persia, after Artaxerxes Longimanus, that is, Artaxerxes Mnemon and Artaxerxes Ochus, whether by «>->-o>- 'ApT:.5.vfii we understand the other, Artaxerxes, or another Artaxerxes, the true propriety of speech will bear neither of them in that place; and, if it could, a long-received reading ought in no ancient author to be varied from, without the authority of some good manuscript to justify the emendation; and there is none alleged in this case. So that all that Vossius saith about it can amount to no more than a conjecture, which we can build nothing certain upon: and to alter old authors upon conjectures only is never to be allowed especially where the context will bear the one reading as well as the other: for, since the various fancies of men may lead to various conjectures, if there should De such a liberty allowed, whole books may be thus altered away, and utterly defaced, by such conjectural emendations; and matly good authors have already too much suffered by it. And thus far I have exqilained this im])ortant prophecy in all its parts and branches, and fully shown all those events in which every particular of it had its completion. That there are several difficulties in it must be acknowledged. The perplexities Avhich many learned men have been led into in their explica- tions of it do sufficiently prove it: and the understanding in a literal sense what is there meant in a figurative hath not been the least cause hereof. Not to be delivered in plain terms is Avhat is common to all prophecies, there being none of them v,'ithout their difficulties and obscurities. There is too great an itch in mankind to look into futurities, which belong to God only to know^ And, al- though God hath been ])leased so far to gratify our curiosity herein, as to give us prophecies for the magnifying of his omniscience among us; yet they are most of them delivered in such dark and obscure terms, as not to be thoroughly under- stood till after they are fulfdled. Then the events become sure comments upon I R. Ab ilmm Lovita in [listnrica Caliala. Daviil Gantz in Zotnacli David. Abraham Zaculus in Jucha *«, e Diodorus Siculiis. Arrian, and duintus Curtius. 3 See the Roman historians. 4 One of these instances may be in Luctillus, a Roman senator; for in one of his halls, which he called Apollo, he expended fifty thousand Roman denarii every time he supped there (which is near sixteen hun- dn.'d pounds of our money,) and there he supped as often as any of the better sort supped with him. The words of Plutarch, who tells us this in the lifeofLucullus, express no more than that the supper cost him five myriads; but this, in strict propriety of speech, can in that author bo meant of no other myriads but of de narii. If we curry the valuation down to that of sestertii, five myriads (that is, fifty thousand) of them will amount to a quarter the sum above mentioned, tliat is, four hundred pounds of our money; and this is pro digious enough Ir, be^pcnt in a supper fu" the entertainment of two Roman senators (for no more were pre sent at the supper particularly mentioned by that author,) and is a great instance of the prodigious wealth of the entertainer. 5 Vi le Urissoniuin de Regno Pcrs. lib. 1. s. 10—20. G Jnsephus Antiq. lib. II. c. 6. 7 O le of these was 'I'imasoras. an Athenian, on whom the people of Athens passed sentence of death for it, thiiikincr the honour of their whole city debased by this mean submission of one of their citizens to him that was then the greatest kiriir of the whole earth. Valer. Max. lib. 6. c. 3. f) Vili' Plularcliuin inThemistocle,etPelopidaet .\rtaxerxe. Herodot. lib. 7. Justinum, lib. 6. c. 2. etCor- nelium Nepotem in Conone. 9 Exod. xvi. 14. 1 Sam. xv. 2, 3. «60 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the destruction of them all in revenge hereof. But whatsoever was the cause that induced Mordecai to refuse the payment of this respect to the king's favour- ite, this provoked that favourite to obtam the decree above mentioned, for the utter extirpation of the whole Jewish nation in revenge for it. When Mordecai heard of this decree, he made' great lamentation, as did also all the Jews of Shushan with him; and therefore, putting on sackcloth, he sat in this mournful garb without the king's gate (for he might not enter within it in that dress;) which being told Esther, she sent to him to know what the mat- ter was; whereon Mordecai acquainted her with the whole state of the case, and sent her a copy of the decree, that thereby she might fully see the mischief that Avas intended against her people, absolutely to destroy them and root th^m out from the face of the earth; and therefore commanded her forthwith to go in unto the king, and make supplication for them. At first she excused herself because of the law, whereby it was ordained, that whosoever, whether man or woman, should come in unto the king into the inner court, who was not called for, should be put to death, excepting such only to whom the king should hold out the golden sceptre in his hand, that he might live; and she was afraid of hazarding her life in this case. Whereon Mordecai, sending to her again, told her, that the decree extended universally to aU of her nation, without any ex- ception; and that, if it came to execution, she must not expect to escape more tlian any other of her people; that Providence seemed to have advanced her of purpose for this work; but if she refused to act her part in it. then deliverance should come some other Avay, and she and her father's house should perish; for he was fully persuaded, God would not suffer his people to be thus totally de- stroyed. Whereon Esther, resolving to put her life to hazard for the safety^ of her people, desired Mordecai, that he and all the Jews then in Shushan should fast three days for her, and offer up prayer and humble supplication to Gk>d to prosper her in the undertaking; which being accordingly done, on the third day, Esther put on her royal apparel, and went in unto the king, where he was sit- ting upon his throne, in the inner part of the palace: and as soon as he saw her standing in the court, he showed favour unto her, and held out his golden scep- tre toward her; and Esther going near, and touching the top of it; had thereby her life secured unto her. And when the king asked her what her petition was, at first she only desired that he and Haman would come to a banquet which she had prepared for him. And when Haman was called, and the king and he were at the banquet, he asked her again of her petition, promising it should be granted her, even to the half of his kingdom; but then she desired only that the king and Haman would come again the next day to the like banquet, intimating, that then she would make known her request unto him. Her intention, in desiring thus to entertain the king twice at her banquets, before she made known her pe- tition unto him, was, that thereby she might the more endear herself to him, and dispose him the better tc^grant the request which she had to make unto him. Haman, being proud of the honour of being thus admitted alone with the king to the queen's banquet,. went home to his house much puffed up herewith. But, in his returning thither, seeing Mordecai sitting at the gate of the palace, and still refusing to bow unto him, this moved his indignation to such a degree, that on his coming to his house, and calling his friends about him to relate to them the great honour that Avas done him by the king and queen, and the high advancement which he had obtained in the kingdom, he could not forbear com- plaining of the disrespect and affront offered him by Mordecai. Whereon they advised him to cause a gallows to be built of fifty cubits height, and next morn- mg to ask the king to have Mordecai to be hanged thereon. And accordingl}-- he ordered the gallows immediately to be made, and went early next morning to the palace for the obtaining of a grant from the king, to hang Mordecai on it. But that morning the king awaking sooner than ordinary," and not being able to compose himself again to sleep, he called for the book of the records ' Kslheri Joscplius Antiq. lib. li. c 6. 2 Esther vi. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 261 and chronicles of the kingdom, and caused them to be read unto him; wherein finding an account of the conspiracy of IJigthan and Teresh, and that it was discovered by Mordecai the Jew, the king inquired what honour had been done to him for the same; and being told that nothing had been done for him, he inquired who was in the court; and being told that Haman was standing there (for he intended early to speak to the king for the purpose I have mentioned,) he ordered him to be called in, and asked of him, what should be done to the man whom the king delighted to honour. Whereon Haman thinking this honour was mtended for himself, gave advice, that the royal apparel should be brought which the king used to wear, and the horse which was kept for his own riding, and the crown royal which useth to be set on his head, and that ■this apparel and horse should be delivered into the hands of one of the king's most noble princes, that he might array therewith the man whom the king de- lighted to honour, and bring him on horseback through the whole city, and pro- claim before him. Thus shall it be done unto the man whom the king delight- eth to honour^ Whereon the king commanded him forthwith to take the ap- parel and horse, and do all this to Mordecai the Jew, who sat in the king's gate, in reward for his discovery of the treason of the two eunuchs. All which Ha- man having been forced to do, in obedience to the king's command, he returned with great sorrow to his house, lamenting the disappointment, and great morti- fication he had met with, in being thus forced to pay so signal an honour to his enemy, whom he intended at the same time to have hanged on the gallow* which he had provided for him. And on his relating of this to his friends, they all told him, that if this Mordecai were of the seed of the Jews, this bad omen foreboded, that he should not prevail against him, but should surely fall before him. While they were thus talking, one of the queen's chamberlains came to Haman's house to hasten him to the banquet, and seeing the gallows which had been set up the night before, fully informed himself of the intent for which it was prepared. On the king and Haman's sitting down to the ban- quet', the king asked again of Esther what was her petition, with like promise, as before, of granting of it to her even to the half of his kingdom. Whereon she humbly prayed the king, that her life might be given her at her petition, and her jDCople at her request; for a design was laid tor the destruction of her, and all her kindred and nation: at which the king asking with much anger, who it was that durst do this thing, she told him that Haman, then ffresent, was the wicked author of the plot, and laid the whole of it open to the king. Where- on the king rose up in great wrath from the banquet, and walked out into the garden adjoining; which Haman perceiving, fell down before the queen upon the bed on which she was sitting, to supplicate for his life; in which posture the king having found him on his return, spoke out in great passion. What! will he force the queen before me in the house? At which words the servants present immediately covered his face,* as was then the usage to condemned persons; and the chamberlain, who had that day called Haman to the banquet, acquainting the king of the gallows which he saw at his house there prepared for Mordecai, who had saved the king's life in detecting the treason of the two eunuchs, the king ordered that he should be forthwith hanged thereon, which was accordingly done; and all his house, goods, and riches, were given to Queen Esther, and «he appointed Mordecai to be her steward to manage the same. On the same day,* the queen acquainted the king of the relation which Morde- cai had unto her; whereon the king took him into his favour, and advanced him to great pow-er, riches, and dignity, in the empire, and made him the keeper of his signet, in the same manne'r as Haman had been before. But still the decree for the destruction of the Jews remaining in its full force,* the queen petitioned the king the second time to put away this mischief from them. But, according to the laws of the Medes and Persians,^ nothing being 1 Esther vii. Josephus Antiq. lib. U. c. G. 2 Vide Brissonium de Regno Persarum. 3 Esther viii 4 Esther viii. Josephus, lib. II. c. fi. 5 j an. vi. 8. 15. Esther i. 19. viii. 8. 262 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF to be reversed which had been decreed and written in the king's name, and sealed with the king's seal, and the decree procured by Haman against the Jews having been thus written and sealed, it could not be recalled. AH, there- fore, that the king could do, in compliance with her request, was to give the Jews, by a new decree, such a power to defend themselves against all that should assault them, as might render the former decree ineffectual; and for that end he bid Esther and Mordicai draw such a decree in words, as strong as they could devise, that so the former might be hindered from being executea, though it could not be annulled. And therefore the king's scribes being again called, on the twenty-third day of the third month, a new decree was drawn, just two months and ten days after the former; wherein the king granted to the Jews, which were in every city of the Persian empire, full license to gather themselves, together, and stand for their lives; and to destroy, slay, and cause to perish, all the power of the people and province that should assault them, with their little ones and women, and to take the spoil of them for a prey. And this decree being written in the king's name, and sealed with his seal, copies hereof were drawn out, and especial messengers were despatched with them into aU the provinces of the empire. ' In the interim,' Megabyzus having reduced the whole kingdom of Egypt, except the fenny part held by Amyrtseus, and there settled all matters again under the dominion of King Artaxerxes; he made Sartamas governor of that country, and returned to Susa, carrying with him Inarus and his Grecian pri- soners. And having given the king an account of the articles he had granted them of life and safety, he obtained of them a ratification of the same, although A^ith difficulty, because of the king's anger against them for the death of Achse- menides his brother, who was slain in battle against them. But Hamestris, the mother of both these brothers, was so eagerly set for the revenging of the death of her son, that she not only demanded, that Inarus and his Greeks should be delivered up to her to be put to death for it, contrary to the articles given them, but also required that Megabyzus himself, though her son-in-law, should undergo the same punishment, for granting them such articles as should exempt them from that just revenge, which in this case she ought to execute upon them And it was with difficulty that she was for this time put off with a denial. ^11. 452. Aiidx. 13.] — The thirteenth day of Adar drawing near," Avhen the decree obtafned by Haman for the destruction of the Jews was to be put in ex- ecution, their, adversaries every where prepared to act against them according to the contents of it. And the Jews, on the other hand, by virtue of the second decree above mentioned, which was obtained in their favour by Esther and Mordecai, gathered themselves together in every city where they dwelt, tlirough- out aU the provinces of King Artaxerxes, to provide for their defence; so that, on the said thirteenth of Adar, through the means of these two different and discordant decrees, a war was commenced between the Jews and their enemies throughout the whole Persian empire. But the rulers of the provinces, and the lieutenants, the deputies, and other officers of the king, knowing in what power Esther and Mordecai were then with him, through fear of them, so favoured the Jews, that they prevailed every where against all those that rose up against them; and, on that day, throughout the whole empire, slew of their enemies seventy-five thousand persons; and, in the city of Shushan, on that day a.id the next, eight hundred more, among which were the ten sons of Haman, whom, by a special order from the king, they caused all to be hanged, perchanre upon the same gallows on which Haman their father had been hanged before. The Jews being thus delivered from this dangerous design, which threatened them with no less than utter extirpation, they made great rejoicings for it on the two days following, that is, on the fourteenth and fifteenth days of the said month of Adar. And,^ by the order of Esther and Mordecai, these two days, 1 Ctesiiis. 2 Esther ix. Joseplius Atitiq. lib. 11. c. 6. 3 Esther ix. 20—2-2. Josephus Anliq. lib. 11. n. f> THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 263 with the thirteenth that preceded them, were set apart and consecrated to be annually observed for ever ai'ter in commemoration hereof; the thirteenth as a fast, because of the destruction on that day intended to have been brought upon tliem, and the other two as a feast, because of their deliverance from it. And both this fast and this feast they constantly observe every year on those days even to this time.' The* fast they call the fast of Esther, and the feast the feast of Purim, from the Persian word /^M?-m (which signifieth lots,) because it was by the casting of lots that Haman did set out this time for their destruction. This feast is the Bacchanals of the Jews, which they celebrate with all manner of rejoicing, mirth, and jollity; and therein indulge themselves in all manner of luxurious excesses, especially in drinking wine even to drunkenness, which they think part of the duty of the solemnity, because it was by the means of the wine banquet (they say) that Esther made the king's heart merry, and brought him into that good humour which inclined him to grant the request which she made unto him for their deliverance; and therefore, they think they ought to make their hearts merry also when they celebrate the commemoration of it. During this festival, the book of Esther is solemnly read in all their synagoges from the beginning to the end, at which they are all to be present, men, women, children, and servants; because all these had their parts in this deliverance which I]stlier obtained for them. And as often as the name of Haman oc- curs in the reading of this book, the usage is for them all to clap with their hands and stamj) with their feet, and cry out, Let his memory perish. This is the last feast of the year among them: for the next that follows is the Passover, which always falls in the middle of the month which begins the Jewish year. An. 450. Jlriax. 15.] — The Athenians, having provided themselves with ano- ther fleet, after the loss of that in Egypt,'' sent Cimon with two hundred sail again into Cyprus, there to carry on the war against the Persians; where he look Citium and Malum, and several other cities, and sent sixty sail into Egypl to the assistance of Amyrtaeus. At the same time Artabasus was in those seas with a fleet of three hundred sail; and Megabyzus, the other general of King Artaxerxes, had a land army of three hundred thousand men on the coast of Cilicia; but neither of them had the success in this war which they had in the last. For, An. 449. Artax. 16.] — Cimon," on the return of his ships from Egypt, fell on Artabasus, and having taken a hundred of his ships, and destroyed several others, pursued the remainder to the coasts of Phoenicia; and, being flushed with this success, on his return landed upon Megabyzus in Cilicia, and over- threw him also, making a very great slaughter of his numerous army, and then sailed back again to Cyprus with a double triumph. Artaxerxes hearing of these great losses sustained both at sea and land,^ be- came weary of so destructive a Avar; and therefore, upon thorough advice taken v/ith his counsellors ana ministers, came to a resolution of putting an end to the calamities of it, by coming to an accommodation with the enemy; and accordingly sent to his generals and commanders, who had the charge of the Cyprio-n war, to make peace with the Athenians on the best terms they could. Whereon Megabyzus and Artabasus, sending ambassadors to Athens to make the proposal, plcnipotentiaries^jvere appointed on each side to treat of the mat- ter: and they came to an agreement on these terms, first. That all the Grecian cities in Asia should have their liberty, and be left free to live according to their own laws; secondly, That no Persian ship of war should any more appear on any of those seas, which lie from the Cyanean to the Chilidonian islands, that is, from the Euxine Sea to the coasts of Paniplwlia; thirdly. That no Persian commander should come Avith an army by land within three days' journey of those seas: fourthly, That the Athenians should no more invade any of the terri- tories of King Artaxerxes. Which articles, being ratified and sAVorn to on boib 1 Taliiiiiil in Mi-j/illah Maiinonidcs in Megillah. nnxtorfii Synag-ogo Jujaica, c. '20 2 PIntaitliMs in Cinione. Thncydiilos. lib. 1. Diod. Sic. lib, 11. 3 Diodor. Sic. lib. II PIntarcbus in Cimoiie 2fi4 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF sides, peace was concluded. And so this war ended, after it bad continued from the time that tlie Athenians burned Sardis (which was the first beginning of it,) full fifty-one years, to the destruction of a vast number of men on both sides. In the interim Cimon died at Citium, and the Athenians returned with his corpse into Athens, and after this came no more into those seas. ^n. 448. Adax. 17.] — King Artaxerxes,' being continually solicited by his mother to deliver to her Inarus and the Athenians who were taken with him in Egyi:)t, that she might revenge on them the death of her son Acheemenides, after having for five years resisted her unwearied and restless importunities, was at last tired out by them to yield to her request; and the prisoners were de- livered to her: whereon the cruel woman, without having any regard to the public faith which had been plighted for their safet}^ caused Inarus to be cruci- fied,^ and the heads of the rest to be struck off; at which Megabyzus was ex- ceedingly grieved and offended; for it being on his engagement for their safety that they had rendered themselves, he thought it great dishonour done him that it was thus violated, and therefore retired in discontent into Syria, the province of which he was governor, and, to revenge the wrong, there raised an army, and rebelled against the king. An. 447. Ariax. 18.] — To repress this rebellion,* Artaxerxes sent Osiris, a prime nobleman of his court, with two hundred thousand men into Syria. But Megabyzus, having met him in battle, wounded him, and took him prisoner, and put his whole army to flight. But Artaxerxes, having sent a messenger to demand him, Megabyzus forthwith released him, and, as soon as his wounds were healed, sent him back again to the king. An. 446. Artax. 19.] — The next year following, the king sent another army against him,* under the command of Menostanes, son to Artarius, governor of Babylon, and one of his brothers. But he had no better fortune this year than the former general had in the last; for, being in the same manner vanquished and put to flight, Megabyzus gained a great victory over him. Whereby Artax- erxes perceiving that he could not prevail against him by force of arms, sent Artarius his brother, and Amytis his sister," who was Avife to Megabyzus, with several other persons of quality, to reconcile him unto him, and bring him by fair means to return to his duty; by whose interposition the difference being made up, the king granted him his pardon, and he returned again to court. But, while the king was hunting, a lion having raised himself upon his hinder legs against him, Megabyzus, Avho was then present, out of his zeal to extricate the king from this danger, threw a dart at the lion, and slew him. But Artax- erxes, laying hold of this light pretence to express the bitter rancour which he still retained in his mind against him for his late revolt, ordered his head to be struck off", for presuming to strike at the beast before him; and it was with diffi- culty that Amytis his wife, and Hamestris her mother, with their joint petitions, prevailed so far in his behalf, that his sentence of death was changed into that of banishment: whereon he was sent to Cyrta, a place on the Red Sea, there to lead the rest of his life under confinement. But after he had lived there five years, having made his escape from thence, and under the habit and dis- guise of a leper, got safe to his own house at Susa, he was there, by the means of his wife and her mother, again restored to the king's favour, and continued in it ever after to the time of his death, Avhich happened some 3'ears after, in the seventy-sixth year of his age, and was then very much lamented by the king and all his court: for he Avas the ablest man, both in council and Avar, that was in the Avhole empire, and to him Artaxerxes OAved his life, as Avell as his crown, at his first accession to the government. But it is a dangerous thing for a subject to have too much obliged his prince; and this Avas the cause of all the misfortunes that happened unto him. Ezra* continued in the government of Judea till the end of this year, and by virtue of the commission he had from the king, and the poAvers granted him 1 Ctesia?. ^ Thucvfl. lib. 1. Ctosias. 3 Ctp^ia?. 4 U)id. 3 Ezra. viii. ix. x. >'fclioiP '. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 265 thereby, he reformed the whole state of the Jewish church according to the law of Moses, in which he was excellently learned, and settled it upon that bottom upon which it afterward stood to the time of our Saviour. The two chief things which he had to do, were to restore the observance of the Jewish law, according to the ancient approved usages which had been in practice before the captivity, under the directions of the prophets, and to collect together and set forth a correct edition of the holy scriptures; in the performance of both which, the Jews tell us, he had the assistance of what they call the great sj'na- gogue, which, they tell us,' was a convention consisting of one hundred and twenty men, who lived all at the same time under the presidency of Ezra, and were assisting to him in both these two works; and, among these, they named Daniel, and his three friends, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abendego, as the first of them, and Simon the Just as the last of them; though, from the last mention which we have of Daniel in the holy scriptures, to the time of Simon the Just, there had passed no less than two hundred and fifty years. But all this they reconcile by that absurd and wretched account which they give of the history of those times; for they tell us, that the whole Persian empire lasted only fifty- two years (as hath been before taken notice of,) and that the Darius whom we call Darius Hystaspes was the Darius whom Alexander conquered, and that the same was the Artaxerx«^<; (which they will have to be the common name of all the kings of Persia in those times) who sent Ezra first, and afterward Nehemiah, to Jerusalem, to restore the state of the Jews; and that Simon the Just was the same with Jaddua the high-priest, who received Alexander at Jerusalem. And according to this account, they might indeed all have lived together in the seventh year of this Darius (or Artaxerxes as they w^ould call him,) when they say Ezra first went to Jerusalem; for that he was in the middle of the said fifty-two years, according to their computation, at which time Jaddua might very well have been of an age capable to assist in those councils; and it is not impossible but Daniel might have lived down to it, for the scriptures gives us no accouut of his death. The truth of this matter seemeth most likely to have been, that these one hundred and twenty men were such principal elders as lived in a continued succession from the first return of the Jews, after the Babylonish captivity, to the death of Simon the Just, and laboured in their several times, some after others, in the carrying on of the two great works above mentioned, till both were fully completed in the time of the said Simon the Tust (who was made high-priest of the Jews in the twenty-fifth year after the death of Alexander the Great,) and Ezra had the assistance'of such of them as lived in his time. But the whole conduct of the work, and the glory of accom- plishing it. is, by the Jews, chiefly attributed to him, under whose presidency (they tell us) it was done. And there they look on him as another Moses:* for the law, they say, was given by Moses, but it was revived and restored by Ezra, after it had been in a manner extinguished and lost in the Babylonish captivity; and, therefore, they reckon him as the second founder of it. And it is a common opinion among them,^ that he was Malachi the prophet; that he was called Ezra as his proper name, and Malachi (which signifieth an angel or messenger) from his office, because he was sent, as the angel and messenger of God, to restore again the Jewish religion, and establish it in the same manner as it was before the captivity, on the foundation of the law and the prophets. And, indeed, by virtue of that ample commission, which he had from King Artaxerxes, he had an opportunity of doing more herein than any other of his nation; and he executed all the powers thereof to the utmost he was able, for the resettling both of the ecclesiastical and political state of the Jews, in the best posture they were then capable of: and from hence his name is in so liigh esteem and veneration among the Jews, that it is a common saying among their 1 Vide navideriiOanz, aliosqiie Jiulaioriim Ilistnricos, ct Buxtorfii, Tiberiadem, c. x. 2 Vide Biixtorfii Tibeiiadem.c. 10. 3 Abraham Zacntusiii Juchasin. UaviilGanzChaldaiusParaphrastesin Malacliiam. Knxtorfii TIlK'ri js.c. 3. Vol. I.--^ 266 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF writers, that if the law had not been given by Moses, Ezra was wortliy by whom it should have been given. As to the ancient and approved usages of the Jewish church, which had Z^ been in practice before the captivity, they had, by Jeshua and Zerubbabel, with the chief elders their contemporaries, and by others that after succeeded them, been a gathering together from their first return to Jerusalem, as they could be recovered from the memories of the ancients of their nation, who had either seen them practised themselves before the captivity, or had been informed con- cerning them by their parents, or others who had lived before them: all these; and whatsoever else was pretended to be of the same natuie, Ezra brought un- der a review; and having, after due examination, allowed such of them as were to be allowed, and settled them by his approbation and authority, they gave birtli to what the Jews now call their oral law. For they own a twofold law;' the first, the written law, which is recorded in the holy scriptures; and the se- cond, the oral law, which they have only by the tradition of their elders. And Doth these, they say, were given them by Moses from Mount Sinai; of which the former only was committed to writing, and the other delivered down to them, from generation to generation, by the tradition of the elders. And, therefore, holding them to be both of the same authority, as having both of them the same divine original, they think themselves to be bound as much by the latter as the former, or rather much more: for the written law is, they say,* in many places, obscure, scanty, and defective, and could be no perfect rule to them without the oral law; which containing-, according to th-em, a full, com- plete, and perject interpretation of all that is written in the other, supplies all the di;fects, and solves all the difficulties of it. And, therefore, they observe the written law no otherwise than according as it is expounded and interpreted by their oral law. And hence, it is a common saying among them, that the covenant was made with them, not upon the written law, but upon the oral law. And, therefore, they do in a manner lay aside the former to make room for the latter, and resolve their whole religion into their traditions, in the same manner as the Romanists do theirs, having no farther regard to the written word of God than as it agrees with their traditionary explications of it, but always preferring them thereto, though, in many particulars, they are quite contradictory to it: which is a corruption that had grown to a great height among them even in our Saviour's time; for he chargeth them with it, and tells them (Mark vii. 13,) that they made the word of God of none effect through their traditions. But they have done it much more since, professing a greater regard to the latter than the former. And hence it is, that we find it so often said in their writings, that the words of the scribes are lovely above the words of the law; that the words of the law are weighty and light, but the words of the scribes are all weighty; that the words of the elders are weightier than the words of the pro- phets (w'here, by the words of the scribes, and the words of the elders, they mean the traditions delivered to them by their scribes and elders:) and, in other places, that the written text is only as water, but the Mishnah and Talmud (in which are contained their traditions) are as wine and hippocras: and again, that the written law is only as salt, but the Mishnah and Talmud as pepper and sweet spices. And, in many other sayings, very common among them, do they express the high veneration which they bear toward the oral or traditionary law, and the little regard which they have to the written word of God in comparison of it, making nothing of the latter but as expounded by the former, as if the written word were no more than the dead letter, and the traditionary law alone the soul that gives the whole life and essence thereto. And this being what 1 Vide Buxtorfiura do Opere Taliniulico, ct Syiiagogam Judaicam ejusdem, et Maimonidis Prjcfationem ad Seder Zeraini. 2 Miiirnoniflis Trxfalio ad Beder Zcraim. Buxtorlii Syiiagoga Judaica, c. 3. et ejusdem Reconsio Operii Talmudici. Schickardi Bechinaih Happnriishim, disp. 1. s. 1. Hottingeri Thesaurus, lib. 2. c. 3. s. 3. Ligkt- THE OLD A-\D NEW TESTAMENT. 26"/ they hold of their traditions, which the}- call their oral law, the account which they give of its original is as foUoweth: For they tell us, that at the same time when God gave unto Moses the law on Mount Sinai,' he gave unto him also the interpretation of it, commanding him to commit the former to writing, but to deliver the other only by wora , i mouth, to be preserved in the memories of men, and to be transmitted down by them, from generation to generation, by tradition only; and from hence the former is called the written, and the other the oral law'. And, to this day, ah the determinations and dictates of the latter are termed by the Jews constitu- tions of Moses from Mount Sinai, because they do as firmly believe that he re- ceived them all from God, in liis forty days' converse with him in that mount, as that he then received the written text itself: that, on his return from this con- verse, he brought both of these laws with him, and delivered them unto the people of Israel in this manner. As soon as he was returned to his tent, he called Aaron thither unto him, and first delivered to him the text, which was to be the written law, and after that the interpretation of it, vvhich was the oral law, in the same order as he received both from God in the mount. Then Aaron arising-, and seating; himself at the risrht hand of Moses, Eleazar and Itha- mar, his sons, went next in; and being taught both these laws, at the feet of the prophet, in the same manner as Aaron had been, they also arose, and seated themselves, the one on the left hand yf Moses, and the other on the right hand of Aaron; and then the seventy elders, who constituted the Sanhedrin, or great senate of the nation, went in, and being taught by Moses both these laws in the same manner, they also seated themselves in the tent; and then entered all such of the people as were desirous of knowing the law of God, and were taught it in the same manner: after this, Moses withdrawing, Aaron repeated the whole of both laws as he had heard it from him, and also withdrew; and then Eleazar and Ithamar repeated the same; and on their withdrawing, the seventy elders made the same repetition to the people then present; so that each of them hav- ing heard both these laws repeated to them four times, they all had it thereby firmly fixed in their memories; and, that then they dispersed themselves among the whole congregation, and communicated to all the people of Israel what had been thus delivered unto them by the prophet of God: that they did put the text into writing, but the interpretation of it they delivered down only by word of mouth to the succeeding generations: that the written text contained the six hundred and thirteen precept* into wliich they divide the law, and the unwrit- ten interpretations, all the manners, ways, and circumstances, that were to be observed in the keeping of them: that after this, toward the end of the fortieth year from their coming up out of the land of Egypt, in the beginning of the eleventh month (which fell about the middle of our January,) Moses calling all the people of Israel together, acquainted them of the approaching time of his death; and therefore ordered, that if any of them had forgot aught of what he had delivered to them, they should repair to him, and he would repeat to them anew what had slipped their memories, and farther explain unto them every difficulty and doubt which might arise in their minds concerning what he had taught them of the law of their God; and that hereon, they applying to him, all the remaining time of his life, that is, from the said beginning of the eleventh month until the sixth day of the twelfth month, was employed in in- structing them ancw^ in the text, which they call the written law, and in the i»- terpretations of it, which they call the oral law: and that, on the said sixth day, having delivered to them thirteen copies of the written law, all copied out with his own hand, from the beginning of Genesis to the end of Deuteronomy, one to each of the twelve tribes, to be kept by them throughout their generations, and the thirteenth to the Levites, to be laid up by them in the tabernacle before the Jjord; and ha\ing moreover then anew repealed the oral law to Joshua his I Prrko Avoth. c. 1. , rr;cf;itin Mainioiiidis in Rciler Zcraini in Pocockii Porta Mn?is, p. '.i! &!• I>uxto;6j Reccnsiu OperisTalmudici. David Ganz. Zacutus in Juc)iasin,&c. •26S CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF successor, he went, on the seventh day, up into Mount Nebo, and there died, that, after his death, Josliua deUvered the said oral law to the elders who alter succeeded him, and they delivered it to the prophets, and the prophets trans- mitted it down from each other, till it cam.e to Jeremiah, who delivered it to Baruch, and Baruch to Ezra, by whom it wasidelivered to the men of the great synagogue, the last of whom was Simon the Just; that by him it was delivered to Antigonus of Socho, and by him to Jose the son of Jochanan, and by him to Jose the son of Joezer, and bj^ him to Nathan the Arbelite, and Joshua the son of Perachiah, and by them to Judah the son of Tabbai, and Simeon the son of Shatah, and by them to Shemaiah and Abtalion, and by them to Hillel, and by Hillel to Simeon his son, who is supposed to have been the same that took our Saviour into his arms when he was brought to the temple to be there pre- sented to the Lord at the time of his mother's purification; and by Simeon it was delivered to Gamaliel his son (the same at whose feet Paul was brought up,) and by him to Simeon his son, by him to Gamaliel his son, and by him to Si- meon his son, and by him to Rabbi Judah Hakkadosh his son, who wrote it into the book which they call the Mishnah. But all this is mere fiction, spun out of the fertile invention of the Talmu- dists, without the least foundation, either in scripture, or in any authentic his- tory for it. But since all this is now made a part of the Jewish creed, and they do as firmly believe their traditions to have thus come from God in the manner I have related, as they do the written word itself, and have now, as it were, wholly resolved their religion into these traditions, there is no understanding what their religion at present is without it. And it is for this reason that I have here inserted it. But the truth of the matter is this. After the death of Simon the Just,' there arose a sort of men, whom they call the Tannaim or the Mishnical doctors, that made it their business to study, and descant upon those traditions which had been received and allowed by Ezra, and the men of the great synagogue, and to draw inferences and consequences from them, all which they ingrafted into the body of these ancient traditions, as if they had been as authentic as the other; which example being followed by those who after succeeded them in this profession, they continually added their own imaginations to what they had received from those that went before them; whereby these traditions becoming as a snow-ball, the farther they rolled down from one generation to another the more they gathered, and the greater the bulb of them grew. And thus went on to the middle of the second century after Christ, when Antoninus Pius governed the Roman empire; by which time they found it necessary to put all these traditions into writing; for they were then grown to so great a number, and enlarged to so huge a heap, as to exceed the possibility of being any longer preserved by the memory of men. And besides, on the second de- struction which their country had undergone from the Romans a little before, in the reign of Adrian, the preceding emperor, most of their learned men hav- ing been cut off, and the chiefest of their schools broken up and dissolved, and vast numbers of their people dissipated and driven out of the land, the usual method of preserving their traditions had then in a great measure failed; and therefore there being danger, that, under these disadvantages, they might be all forgotten and lost, for the preventing hereof, it was resolved, that they should be all collected together, and put into a book; and Rabbi Judah, the son of Simeon, who, from the reputed sanctity of his life, was called Hak- kadosh, that is, the Holy, and was then rector of the school M^hich they had at Tiberias in Galilee, and president of the Sanhedrin that there sat, undertook the work, and compiled it in six books, each consisting of several tracts, which all together make up the number of sixty-three: in which, under their proper heads, he •methodically digested all that hitherto had been delivered to them of their law and their religion by the tradition of their ancestors. And this is the 1 Zeinach David. Jucha.sin Shalslieleth llaccabbnla. Buxtorfii Lexicon Eabbinicum. p. 2610, 2011. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. -269 book called the Misnah; which book was forthwith received by the Jews with great veneration throughout all their dispersions, and hath ever since been held in high esteem among them; for their opinion of it is, that all the particulars therein contained were dictated by God himself to Moses from Mount Sinai, as well as the Written word itself, and consequently must be of flie same divine authority with it, and ought to be as sacredly observed. And therefore, as soon as it was published, it became the subject of the studies of all their learned men, and the chiefest of them, both in Judea and Babylonia, employed them- selves to make comments on it: and these, with the Mishnah, make up both their Talmuds, that is, the Jerusalem Talmud and the Babylonish Tahnud. These comments they call tlic Gemara, i. e. the Complement, because by them the Mishnah is fully explained, and the whole traditionary doctrine of their law and their religion completed: for the Mishnah is the text, and the Gemara the comment; and both together is what fhey call the Talmud. That made by the Jews of Judea, is called the Jerusalem Talmud; and that made by the Jews of Babylonia, is called the Babylonish Talmud. The former was completed about the year of our Lord 300, and is published in one large folio: the latter was published about two hundred years after, in the beginning of the sixth cen- tury, and hath had several editions since the invention of printing; the last published at Amsterdam is in twelve folios. And in these two Talmuds (the law and the prophets being in a manner quite justled out by them) is contained the whole of the Jewish religion that is now professed among them. But the Ba- bylonish Talmud is that which they chiefly follow: for the otlier, that is, the Jerusalem Talmud, being obscure and hard to be understood, is not now much regarded by them. But this and the Mishnah being the ancientest books which they have (except the Chaldee paraphrases of Onkelos and Jonathan,) and both written in the language and style of the Jews of Judea, our countryman, Dr. Llghtlbot, hath made very good use of them in explaining several places of the New Testament, by parallel phrases and sayings out of them. For the one being composed about the one hundred and fiftieth year of our Lord, and ths other about the three hundredth, the idioms, proverbial sayings, and phraseolo- gies, used in our Saviour's time, might very well be preserv-ed in them. But the other Talmud being written in the language and style of Babylonia, and not compiled till about the five hundredth year of our Lord, or, as some will have it, much later, this cannot so well serve for this purpose. However, it is now the Alcoran of the Jews, into which they have resolved all their faith and all their religion, although framed (almost with the same imposture as that of Ma- homet) out of doctrines falsely pretended to be brought from heaven. And in this book all that now pretend to any learning among them place their studies; and no one can be a master in their schools, or a teacher in their synagogues, who is not well instructed and versed herein, that is, not only in the text, which is the Mishnah, but also in the comment thereon, which is the Gemara.. And this comment they so highly esteem beyond the other, that the name ef Gemara is wholly engrossed by it; the Gemaiaof the Babylonish Talmud being that only which they now usually understand by that word. For this, with the Mishnah to which it is added, they think, doth truly complete and make up the whole of their religion, as fully and perfectly containing all the doctrines, rules and rites thereof; and therefore it is, in their opinion, the most deserving of that name, which signifieth what completes, fills up, or perfects: for this is the meaning of the word in the Hebrew language. Out of this Talmud, Maimo- nides hath made an abstract, containing only the resolutions or determinations made therein on every case, without the descants, disputes, fables, and other trash under which they lay buried in that vast load of rubliish. This work is entitled by him Yad llachazakah, and is one of the completest digests of law that was ever made; I mean, not as to the matter, but in respect only of the cleame.-s of the style and method in which it is composed, the filthy mass of (ilrt from under wfiich he dug it, and the comprehensive manner in which ht. 270 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF hath digested the whole. Others among them have attempted the like work^ but none have been able to exceed or come nigh him herein. And for this and other of his writings, he is deservedly esteemed the best author among them They who r)rofessed this sort of learning, that is, taught and propagated these traditionary doctrines among them, have been distinguished by several differ- ent titles and appellations, according to the different ages in which they lived. From the time of the men of the great synagogue, to the publishing of the Mishnah, they were called Tannaim;^ and they are the Mishnical doctors, out of whose doctrines and traditions the Mishnah was composed. And from the time of the publishing of the Mishnah, to the publishing of the Babylonish Tal- mud, they were called Amoraim;" and they are the Gemarical doctors out of whose doctrines and traditions the Gemara was composed. And, for about one hundred years after the publishing of the Talmud, they were called Sehuraim^ and after that, Geonim* And these were the several classes in -which their learned men have been ranked, according to the several ages in which they formerly lived. But, for these latter times, the general name of Rabbi is that only whereby their learned men are called, there being no other title whereby they have been distmguished-for near seven hundred years past. For, about the year 1010, all their schools in Mesopotamia, where only they enjoyed these high titles, being destroyed, and all their learned men thence expelled and driven out by the Mahometan princes, who then governed in those parts, they have, since that with the greatest number of their people, flocked into those western parts, especially into Spain, France, and England. And from that time, all these pompous titles which they affected in the east being here dropped, they have retained none other for their learned men, from that time, but that of Rabbi, excepting only, that those of them who minister in their synagogues are called Ckacams," i. e. wise men. But the great work of Ezra,'' was his collecting together and setting forth a correct edition of the holy scriptures, which he laboured much in, and went a great way in the perfecting of it. This both Christians and Jews give him the honour of. And many of the ancient fathers attribute more to him, in this par- ticular, than the Jews themselves: for they hold, that all the scriptures were lost and destroyed in the Babylonish captivity, and that Ezra restored them all again by divine revelation. Thus saith Irenaeus,^ and thus say Tertullian," Clemens Alexandrinus," Basil,'" and others." But they had no other founda- tion for it than that fabulous relation which we have of it in the fourteenth chapter of the second apocryphal book of Esdras, a book too absurd for the Ro- manists themselves to receive into their canon. Indeed, in the time of Josiah, through the impiety of the two preceding reigns of Manasseh and Amnion, the book of the law was so destroyed and lost, that besides the copy of it which Hilkiah found in the temple," there was then none other to be had; for the sur- prise which Hilkiah is said to be in at the finding of it, and tlie grief which Josiah expressed at hearing of it read, do plainly show, that neither of them had ever seen it before. And if the king and the high-priest, who were both men of eminent piety, were without this part of holy scripture, it can scarce be thought that any one else then had it. But so religious a prince as King Josiah could not leave this long unremedied. By his order, copies were forthwith written 1 The word Tannaim bath its derivation from tanak, which sigiiifipth to deliver by tradition, and is the same in Chaldco with shana/iin tlie Hebrew, from whence tlie word Mis/iva isdcrived. 2 i. o. Dictators; because Ihcy dictated those explications upon the Misnah which are contained in the Oemara. 3 i. e. Opinionists; for they did not dictate any doctrines, but only inferred opinions by disputation, and probable arguments, from wjiat had boon before dictated and received in the Mis/iiialianii Oemara. 4 t. e. The sublime or excellent doctors: they were so called from the sublimity and excellency of their 'earning. 5 Chacam, in the Hebrew lanjrnage. siijnifieth a wise man. G Vide Huxtorfii Tilieriaflem, c. 11.' 7 Advrsns IlEcroses, lib. 3. c. 25. ' 8 De Habitu Mulierum, c. 3. f Strom. 1. 10 In Kpistola ad Chiloncm. 11 IliiTiniyniiis contra Hclvidium. .lugustinus de Miraculis Sacra Scriplura;, lib. Chrysostoinus, Iloia. I. in Epist. aii Hebrseos. Vi 2Kings, xxii. SChron. xxxiv. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ^^J out from this original; and search being made for all the other parts of holy scripture, both in the colleges of the sons of the prophets, and all other places wiiere they could be found, care was taken for transcripts to be made out of these also, and thenceforth copies of the whole became multiplied among the people; all those who were desirous of knowing the law of their God, either writing them out themselves, or procuring others to do it for them. So that, though within a few years after the holy city and temple were destroyed, and the authentic copy of the law, which was laid up before the Lord, was burned and consumed with them, yet by this time many copies both of the law and the prophets, and all the other sacred writings, were got into private hands, who carried them with them into their captivity. That Daniel had a copy of the holy scriptures with him in Babylon is certain; for he quote^ the law,' and also makes mention o( the prophecies of the prophet Jeremiah;- which he could not do, had he never seen them. And, in the sixth chapter of Ezra, it is said, that on the finishing of the temple, in the sixth year of Darius, the priests and the Levites were settled in their respective functions, according as it is written in the law of Moses. But how could they do this according to the written law, if they had not copies of the law then among them? and this was near sixtj' years before Ezra came to Jerusalem. And farther, in the eighth chapter of Nehemiah, when the people called for the law of Moses, to have it read to them, they did not pray Ezra to get it anew dictated unto him, but that he should bring forth the book of the law of Moses, which the Lord had commanded to Israel: whicJi plainly shows, that the book was then well known to have been extant, and not to need such a miraculous expedient as that of a divine revela- tion for its restoration; and it would with many very much shock the faith of the whole, should it be held, that it owed its present being to such a revival; it being obvious for sceptical persons in this case to object, that he who should be said thus to revive it, then forged the whole. All that Ezra did in this matter, was to get together as many copies of the sacred writings as he could, and out of them all, set forth a correct edition; in the performance of which he took care of these following particulars: — L He corrected all the errors that had crept into these copies through the negligence or mistakes of transcribers; for, by comparing them one with the other, he found out the true reading, and set all at rights. Whether the Keri Cetib that are in our present Hebrew Bibles'^ were of these corrections, I durst not say; the generality of the Jewish writers tell us,^ that they were; and others among them hold much ancienter, referring them, with absurdity enough, even as high up as the very times of the first writers of the books in which they are found, as if they themselves had designedly made these various readings for the sake of some mysteries comprised under them. It is most probable, that they had their original from the mistakes of the transcribers after the time of Ezra, and the observations and corrections of the Masorites made thereon. If any of them were of those ancient various readings which had been observed by Ezra himself in comparing of those copies he collated on this occasion, and were by him annexed m the margin, as corrections of those errors which he found in the text; it is certain those could not be of that number which are now in those sacred books that were written by himself, or taken into the cannon after his time: for there are Keri Cetib's in them as well as in the other books of the Hebrew scriptures. II. He collected together all the books of which the holy scriptures did then consist, and disposed them in their proper order, and settled the canon of scrip- 1 Dan.iv. 11. i;!. 2 Ibid. ix. 2. 3 Tlv KiTi Otil) arc varini»s rnailinesin the (Icbrovv Bililc. Kori sigiiifiPtli thai which is read ind Ci tib that which is writlou. Fur wh^TR thfrn are any sich various readiims, the wroiis rcadins is written in thr text (and that is called the Cetih.) and ths tnio readin-r is written in the mari'in (and that is called tlie K( ri.) 4 De Keri Cetih vide Arcannin Puiictaiiotiis Revelatum. lib. 1. c. 7. Biixtorfii Vindicias VcrilatisHebraica, p«rt 2. c. 4. et Waltoiii Prolegom.8. s. 18, 19, 4;c 272 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF ture for his time. These books he divided into three parts;' 1st, the law; 2dly, the prophets; and 3dly, the Cetubim or Hagiographa, i. e. the holy writings; which division our Saviour himself takes notice of (Luke xxiv. 44,) where he saith, " These are the words which I spake unto you, while I was yet with you, that all things might be fulfilled, which are written in the law, and in the pro- phets, and in the Psalms, concerning me." For there, by the Psalms, he means the whole third part called the Hagiographa: for that part beginning with the Psalms, the whole was for that reason then commonly called by that name, as usually with the Jews the particular books are named from the words with which they begin. Thus, Avith them. Genesis is called Bereshith, Exodus She- moth, Leviticus Vajikra, &c. because they began with these Hebrew words. And Josephus makes mention. of this same division. For he saith, in his first book against Apion, " We have only two-and-twenty books,, which are to be believed as of divine authority; of which five are the books of Moses. From the death of Moses, to the reign of Artaxerxes the son of Xerxes, king of Per- sia, the prophets, who were the successors of Moses, have written in thirteen books. The remaining four books contain hymns to God, and documents of life for the use of men." In which division, according to him, the law contains, L Genesis, 2. Exodus, 3- Leviticus, 4. Numbers, .5. Deuteronomy: the WTit- ings of the prophets, \. Joshua, 2. Judges, with Ruth; 3. Samuel, 4. Kings, 5. Isaiah, 6. Jeremiah, with his Lamentations; 7. Ezekiel, 8. Daniel, 9. the twelve minor prophets, 10. Job, 11. Ezra, 12. Nehemiah, 13. Esther; and the Hagio- grapha, 1. the Psalms, 2. the Proverbs, 3. Ecclesiastes, 4. the Song of So- lomon; which, altogether, make twenty-two books. This division was made for the sake of reducing the books to the number of their alphabet," in which were twenty-two letters. But, at present, they reckon these books to be twen- ty-four,^ and dispoise of them in this order; 1st, the law, which contains, 1. Genesis, 2. Exodus, 3. Leviticus, 4. Numbers, 5. Deuteronomy; 2dl3-, the writings of the prophets, which they divide into the former prophets and the latter prophets, the books of the former prophets are, 6, Joshua, 7. Judges, 8. Samuel, 9. Kings; and the books of the latter prophets are, 10. Isaiah, 11. Je- remiah, 12. Ezekiel, and 13. the twelve minor prophets; 3dly, the Hagiogra- pha, which are, 14. the Psalms, 15. the Proverbs, 16. Job, 17. the Song of Solomon, which they call the Song of Songs; 18. Ruth, 19. the Lamentations, 20. Ecclesiastes, 21. Esther, 22. Daniel, 23. Ezra, and 24. the Chronicles. Under the name of Ezra, they comprehend the book of Nehemiah: for the Hebrews, and also the Greeks, anciently reckoned Ezra and Nehemiah but as one book. But this order hath not been always observed among the Jews;'' neither is it so now in all places, for there hath been great variety as to this: and that not only among the Jews, but also among the Christians, as well Greeks as Latins. But no variation herein is of any moment; for in what or- der soever the books are placed, they are still the word of God, and no change as to this can make any change in that divine authority which is stamped upon them. But all these books were not received into the canon of the holy scrip- tures in Ezra's time; for Malachi, it is supposed, lived after him; and, in Ne- hemiah, mention is made of Jaddua as high-priest, and of Darius Codomannus as king of Persia, who were at least a hundred years after his time; and, in the third chapter of the first book of Chronicles, the genealogy of the sons of Ze- rubbabel is carried down for so many generations, as must necessarily make it reach to the time of Alexander the Great; and, therefore, this book could not be put into the canon till after his time. It is most likely, that the two books of Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther, as well as Malachi, were afterward 1 Bu.vtnifii Tib,-rias, c. 11. Scliickardi Bpchinath Happerushim, c. 1. s. 6. EliasLevitain Masoreth, llam- uiasorcth, Leiisrieni Prrefatio ad Biblia Athije. 2 Hieronymiis in Prnlopo Galeato. 3 Biixtorhi Tiberias, c. 11. Schickanli Bfichinath Happerushim, c. 1. s. 6. Leusdeni Prsfatioad Biblia He- brffia AthiiE. 4 Vide Hodiumde Bibliorum Tf xlibus Originalibus. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 073 added in the time of Simon the Juc't, and that it was not till then that the Jew- ish canon of the ho\y scriptures was fully completed. And, indeed, these last books seem very much to want the exactness and skill of Ezra in their publi- cation, they falling far short of the correctness which is in the other parts of the Hebrew scriptures. The five books of the law are divided into fifty-four sections.' This division many of the Jews hold to be one of the constitutions of Moses from JMount Sinai. But others, with more likelihood of truth, attri- bute it to Ezra. It was made for the use of their synagogues, and the better instructing of the people there in the law of God; for every sabbath-day one of these sections was read in their synagogues.^ And this we are assured, in the Acts of the Apostles, was done amongst them of old time,^ which may well be interpreted from the time of Ezra. They ended the last section with the last words of Deuteronomy on the sabbath of the feast of tabernacles, and then began anew with the first section, from the beginning of Genesis, the next sab- bath after, and so went round in this circle every year. The number of these sections was fifty-four, because in their intercalated years (a month being then added) there were fifty-four sabbaths. On other years they reduced them to the number of the sabbaths which were in those years, by joining two short ones several times into one; for they held themselves obliged to have the whole law thus read over in their synagogues every year. Till the time of the per- secution of Antiochus Epiphanes, they read only the law. But then being for- bid to read it any more,* in the room of the fifty-four sections of the law, they substituted fifty-four sections out of the prophets, the reading of which they ever after continued. So that, when the reading of the law was again restored by the Maccabees, the section which was read every sabbath out of the law served for their first lesson, and the section out of the prophets for their second lesson; and so it was practised in the time of the apostles. And, therefore, when Paul entered into the synagogue at Antiochia in Pisidia, it is said, that "he stood up to preach after the reading of the law and the prophets;"^ that is, after the reading of the first lesson out of the law, and the second lesson out of the prophets. And in that very sermon which he then preached, he tells them, " that the prophets were read at Jerusalem every sabbath-day,'"* that is, in those lessons which were taken out of the prophets. These sections were divided into verses, which the JevV's call Pesukim. They are marked out in the Hebrew Bibles by two great points at the end of them, called from hence Soph-Pasuk, i. e. the end of the verse. If Ezra himself was not the author of this division (as many say,) it was not long after him that it was introduced; for certainly it is very ancient. It is most likely it was invented for the sake of the Targumists or Chaldee interpreters. For, after the Hebrew language had ceased to be the mother-tongue of the Jews, and the Chaldee grew up into use amongst them instead of it,^ as was their case after their return from the Babylonish captivity, their usage was, that* in the public reading of the law to the people, it was read to them, first in the original Hebrew, and after that rendered by an inteqireter into the Chaldee language, that so all might fully understand the same. And this was done period by period. And there- fore, that these periods might be the better distinguished, and the reader more certainly know how much to read at every interval, and the interpreter how much to interpret at every interval, there was a necessity that some marks should be invented for their direction herein. The rule given in their ancient 1 BuxtDifii Tibcriaf, c. 11. ot Tract, dc Tarasliis pt ?ynasot in prnpbetis tres." o Morinns iti Kxcrriiatimiib'is Dihlici^. part 2. e.xercit. I.'i.c. 2. 7 M;\iuioiiid«B(Je Libro Legis, c. 7. 9. Talmud in Bava Bathra, fol.Iii. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 275 tended. But there are two exceptions against it. The first is, that such breaks could not always be made, because sometimes the verse might be run out to the end of the last line, and so leave no space at all for a break; and then there could no distinction at all be made this way between that verse and the next. And the second is,' that those who hold this opinion, that the verses were to be reckoned by lines, allow only two of the lines above mentioned to a verse: but there are many verses which cannot be written in fewer than five or six of those lines. It is most liktl}', that anciently the writing of those books was in long lines, from one side of the parchment to the other, and that the verses in them were distinguished in the same manner as the stichi afterward were in the Greek Bibles. For' the manner of their writing those stichi at first was, to allow a line to every stichus, and there to end the writing where they ended the stichus, leaving the rest of the line void, in the same manner as a line is left at a break. But this losing too much of the parchment, and making the book too bulky, for the avoiding of both these inconveniences, the way afterward was, to put a point at the end of every stichus, and so continue the writing, without leaving any part of the line void as before. And in the same manner, I conceive, the pesukim, or verses of the Hebrew Bibles, were anciently written. At first they allowed a line to every verse; and a line drawn from one side of the parchment to the other, of the length as above mentioned, was sufficient to contain any verse that is now in the Hebrew Bible. But many verses falling short of this length, they found the same inconveniences that the Greeks after did in the fij-st way of their writing their stichi; and therefore came to the same remedy, that is, they did put the two points above mentioned (which they call soph- pasuk) at the place where the former verse ended, and continued the writing of the next verse in the same line, without leaving any void space at all therein. And so their manner hath Continued ever since, excepting only that between their sections, as well the smaller as the greater, there is some void space left to make the distinction between them. And I am the more inclined to think this to be the truth of the matter, that is, that anciently the verses of the Hebrew Bible were so many lines therein, because among the ancients of other nations, about the same time, the lines in the writings of prose authors, as well as of poets, were termed verses; and hence it is that we are told,^ that Zoroastres' works contained two millions of verses, and Aristotle's* four hundred and forty- five thousand two hundred and seventy, though neither of them wrote any thiixg but in prose; and so also we find the writings of Tully,* of Origen," of Lactan- tius,^ and others,* who were all prose writers, reckoned by the number of verses, which could be no other than so many lines. And why then might not the Bible verses anciently have been of the same nature also? I mean when writ- ten in long lines as aforesaid. But the long lines often occasioning, that in reading to the end of one verse, they lost the beginning of the next, and so often did read wrong, either by skipping a line, or beginning the same again: for the avoiding of this," they came to the way of writing in columns and in short lines, as is above mentioned. But all this I mean of their sacred syna- gogical books. In their common Bibles, they are not tied up to such rules, but write and print them so as they may best serve for their instruction and con- 1 M iriniis, ibii. 2 Viilc Millii Prolesoinena ad Gra!cumTcstamentum, p. 80. U riin. lib. 3. c. 1. 4 Dinjimios Laortiiisiti Vila Aristotelis. 5 Ascotiius PeiliannsOiccrntiis viTl)a cilat. versu a prima ocHmrcntcsimo guinquagesimo, tec. G Hi ^ronyiniis in (;atalo!;o Scriptonim Kcclcsiasticorum, et alibi. 7 niiTiiiiviniis ill Epistiila I-21 a'l Dairiasmii. 8 Cnrnoli is IVopt)? in ICpaininoniia. " (n hoc voluinino vitas oxcellenlium virorum compliiriiim concludere cnnslitiiim IS, qiionim spparalini iniiltis niillibis versnuin crinipliirt's scriptores ante nos cxplicarunt." And Jnspph'is tolls lis, in th:^ conclusion nf his Antiquities, " that this work of his contained twentv'books, and si.irvilnu=:an'l(rr.zo. or vorse-'." Forth." Greek 'my,-.-, is the same with the Latin uer,s;ts, and both the same orisiiially with wliat we riill a lino in writinif. For vcr.^us properly is a line, whether in prose or verse, and is vn called a vertemto, because the writer, when he is {rot to the end of one line, turns back his hand, and be pins the next, and so doth the reader also his eye. from the end of one line to the besinninsof the nexl. Vide ^lena-rii Observatirines in Dioirenis Laertii, lib. 4. N. 24. Jerome also, in his preface before his Latin version of the book of Daoiel. sailh. that Methodius. Eiisebius. and Apollinarius, answererl the objections ef Porphvry a^rainst the scriptures, multis versuum milltbus, i. e. by many thousands of verses, that is, lines; for they all wrote in prose. * Maimonidesin Libro Legis, c 7. 276 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF venience in common use. If the Jews at present in their synagug'cpj DL»r«Lp leave out the two points soph-pasuk at the end of the verses, it proref os from their wresting the rule above mentioned, against putting po'uts or accent? into their sacred books, to a too rigorous meaning; for by those points therein men- tioned, seem to be understood no other points than the vowel p'-'ir.ts, and such others as effect the text in the reading. But these two points at the end of every verse only terminate the period, without affecting at all either the words or the letters. But it is no new thing for the Jews, out of an over-superstitious interpretation of their traditions, to make innovations in their ancient usages, especially Avhile they had their schools and universities in Mesopotamia,' and there held their synedrial and consistorial assemblies of their Rabbies, in which they hammered their law, and also their ancient traditions, by a vast numbei of new constitutions and new determinations, into what form they pleased. But the division of the holy scriptures into chapters, as we now have them, is of a much later date. The Psalms, indeed, were always divided as at present, for St. Paul,^ in his sermon at Antioch in Pisidia, quotes the second Psalm. But, as to therest of the holy scriptures, the division of them into such chapters as at present, is what the ancients knew nothing of.^ Some attribute it to Stephen Langton,'' who was archbishop of Canterbury in the reigns of King John and King Henry III. his son. But the true author of this invention was Hugo de Sancto Caro, who being from a Dominican monk advanced to the dignity of a cardinal, and the first of that order that was so, is commonly called Hugo Cardi nials. The whole occasion and history of this matter, and the progress of it tc the state it is now in, is as followeth; — This Cardinal Hugo,* who flourished about the year 1240, and died in the yeaf 1262, had laboured much in the study of the holy scriptures, and made a com- ment on the whole of them. The carrying on of this work administered to him the occasion of inventing the first concordance that was made of the holy scrip- tures, that is, that of the Vulgar Latin Bible. For conceiving that such an in- dex of aU the words and phrases in the holy scriptiu-es would be of great ust. for the attaining of a better understanding of them, he projected a scheme foi the making of it; and forthwith set a number of the monks of his order on tht collecting of the words under their proper classes, in every letter of the alphabet, . in order to this design, and, by the help of so many hands, he soon brought it tc what he intended. This work was afterward much improved by those who fol- lowed him, especially by Arlottus Thuscus, and Conradus Halberstadius, the, former a Franciscan, and the other a Dominican friar, who both lived about the end of the same century. But the whole end and aim of the work being for the easier finding of any word or passage in the holy scriptures, to make it answei this purpose, the cardinal found it necessary, in the first place, to divide thb books into sections, and the sections into under-divisions, that by these he might the better make the references, and the more exactly point out, in the index, where every word or passage might be found in the text. For till then everj book of the holy scriptures, in the Vulgar Latin Bibles, was without any division at all; and therefore, had the index referred only to the book, the whole book, perchance, must have been read over, ere that could be found which was sought tor; but, by referring to it by this division and subdivision, it was immediately had at first sight. And these sections are the chapters which the Bible hath ever since been divided into. For, on the publishing of this concordance, the i They had Uiese schools at Naerda, Sora, and Pombeditha, in Mesopotamia, till about the year of our Lord 1040, Vhen tlifv were driven out thence by the Mahometan princes that reigned in tliose parts. 2 Acts xiii. 'Xi. 3 The Greek Bibles among Christians anciently liad their titaoi and x.'yi by another man's to that which may not be tjie genuine reading, indeed, to read without vowels may look very strange to such who are conversant only with the modern European languages, in which often st-veral consonants come toge- tJjer without a vowel, and several vowels without a consonant, and several of both often go to make up one syllable; and therefore, if m them the consonants were only written, it would be hard to find out what may be the word. But it is quite otherwise in the Hebrew; for in that language there is never more than one vowel in one syllable, and in most syllables only one consonant, and in none more than two; and therefore, in most words, the consonants confine us to the vowels, and determine how the word is to be read, and, if not, at least the context doth. It must be acKnowledged, that there are several combinations of the same consonants, which, as placed in the same order, are susceptible of dif- ferent punctuations, and thereby make different words, and of different signifi- cations, and therefore, when put alone, are of an uncertain reading. But it is quite otherwise when they are joined in context with other words; for, where the letters joined in the same word do not determine the reading, there the words joined in the same sentence always do. And this is no more than Avhat we find in all other languages, and very often in oup own; for we have manv equivocal words, which, being put alone, are of an uncertain signification, but are always determined in the context; as, for example, the word let in English, when put alone by itself, hath not only two different, but two quite contrary meanings; for it signifies to permit, and it signifies also to hinder; but it never doth so in the context, but is thereby always so determined, either to the one or to the other, that no one is ever led into a mistake hereby. And the same is to be said of all such words in Hebrew, as, having the same letters, are suscepti- ble of various punctuations. The letters here cannot deteriuine to the punctua- tion, because they, being in each the same, are indifferent to either. But what the letters cannot do when the word is put alone by itself, that the other wordg always do with which it is joined in the context. And it is want of attention, or want of apprehension, if any one thoroughly skilled in the Hebrew language makes a mistake herein; which may happen in the reading of any other books whatsoever. And therefore, though the Hebrew Bibles had never been pointed, we need not be sent either to the church of Rome or any where else for the fixing of the readings of it, the letters alone, with the context, being sufficient, when we thoroughly understand the language to determine us thereto. There is, in the church of St. Dominic in Bononia,' a copy of the Hebrew scriptures, kept with a great deal of care, which they pretend to be the original copy written by Ezra himself; and therefore it is there valued at so high a rate, that great sums of money have been borrowed by the Bononians upon the pawn of it, and again repaid for its redemption. It is written in a very fair character, upon a sort of leather, and made up in a roll, according to the an- cient manner, but it having the vowel points annexed, and the writing being fresh and fair, without any decay, both these particulars prove the novelty of that copy. But such forgeries are no uncommon things among the papisti- cal sect. But, though Ezra's government over all Judah and Jerusalem expired with this year, yet his labour to serve the church of God did not here end; for still he went on as a preacher of righteousness, and a skilful scribe of the law of God, to perfect the reformation v.'hich he had begun, both in preparing for tho people correct editions of the scriptures, and also in bringing all things in church and state to be conformed to the rules thereof. And this he continued to do as long as he lived; and herein he was thoroughly assisted and suj)ported by the next governor; who coming to Jerusalem with the same intention, and the same zeal for promoting of the honour of God, and the welfare of his peo- ple in Judah and .Terusalem, as Ezra did, he struck in heartily with him in the 1 Fini Adriaiiii Flagellum Judffioruin, lib. 9. c. 2. Tissardi Atnbacei Grammat. Hebroea. Hottingeri The- saiinis I'liilolnjiciis, p. ]15. 513. 292 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF work; so that Ezra went on still to do the same things by the autliority of the new governor v/hich he before did by his own. And by their thus joining to- gether in the same holy undertaking, and their mutual assisting each other Sierein, it exceedingly prospered in their hands, till at length, notwithstanding all manner of oppositions, both from within and from without, it was brought to full perfection, forty-nine years after it had been begun by Ezra. Whether Ezra lived so long or not is uncertain: but what he did not live to do, was com pleted by the piety and zeal of his successor; with an account of whose trans actions I shall begin the next book. BOOK VI. An. 445. Ariax. 20.] — He who succeeded Ezra in the government of Judah and Jerusalem, was Nehemiah,' a very religious and most excellent person: one that was nothing behind his predecessor, saving his learning and great knowledge in the law of God. He came to Jerusalem in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes Longimanus,^ and, by a commission from him, superseded that of Ezra, and succeeded him in the government of Judah and Jerusalem. And he had in that commisssion, by an express clause therein inserted, full authority given him to repair the walls and set up the gates of Jerusalem, and to fortify it again in the same manner as it was before it was dismantled and destroyed by the Babylonians. He was a Jew, whose ancestors had formerly been citi- zens of Jerusalem; for there, he saith, was the place of his fathers' sepulchres.'' But as to the tribe or family which he was of, no more is said, but only that his father's name was Hachaliah; Avho seemeth to have been of those Jews, who, having gotten good settlements in the land of their captivity, chose rather to abide in them, than return into their own country, when leave was granted for it. It is most likely, that he was an inhabitant of the city af Shushan; and that it was his dwelhng there that gave his son an opportunity of gaining an advancement in the king's palace: for he was one of the cupbearers of King Artaxerxes,* which was a place of great honour and advantage in the Persian court, because of the privilege it gave him of being daily in the king's pre- sence, and the opportunity which he had thereby of gaining his favour, for the obtaining of any petition which he should make to him: and that especially, since the times of his attendance always were when the king was making his heart merry with the wine which he served up unto him; for this is the best opportunity with all men, for the obtaining any boon that shall be desired of them, because they are always then in the best humour of complying. And it was at such a time that he asked the government of Judea,* and obtained it. And by the like advantages of his place, no doubt, it was, that he gained those immense riches which enabled him for so many years," out of his own private purse only, to live in his government, with that splendour and expense, as will be hereafter related, without burdening the people at all for it. And no doubt it was by the favour of Queen Esther, as being of the same nation and people with her, that he obtained so honourable and advantageous a preferment m that court. However, neither the honour and advantage of this place, nor the long settlement of his family out of his country, could make him forget his love for it,, or lay aside that zeal which he had for the religion of his forefathers, who had formerly dwelt in it. For though he had been born and bred m a strange land, yet he had a great love for Sion, and a heart thoroughly set for the advancing the prosperity of it, and was in all things a very religious observer of the law of his God. And therefore,' when some came from Jerusalem, and told him r>f the ill state of that city, how the walls of it were still in many places broken 1 Nehem. ii. 2 Ibid. ii. 1. v. 14. 3 N( licni. ii. 3. 4 Vide Brisson um Dd Repno Persi* lib. I. a. 9.^ •> Nehem. ii. 1. G Ibid. v. 11— ID. 7 Ibid. i. THE 01,D AND NEW TESTAMENT. 293 down, and the gates of it in the same demolished state as when burned with fire by the Babylonians, and that, by reason hereof, the remnant of the capti- vity that dwelt there lay open, not only to the incursions and insults of thcii enemies, but also to the reproach and contempt of their neighbours, as a weak and despicable people; and that they were in both these respects in great afflic- tion and grief of heart; the good man, being suitably moved with this repre- sentation, applied himself in fasting and prayer unto the Lord his God, and earnesl.y supplicated to him for his people Israel, and the place which he had chosen for his worship among them. And, having thus implored the divine mercy against this evil, he resolved next to make his application to the king for the redressing of it, trusting in God for the inclining of his heart thereto: and therefore, when his turn came next to w^ait in his office, the king observing his countenance to be sad,' which at other times used not so to be, and asking the cause thereof, he took this opportunity to lay before before him the distressed state of his country; and, owning this to be a cause of great grief and sadness unto him, he prayed the king to send him thither to remedy it; and, by the fa- vour of Queen Esther, he had his petition granted unto him: for it being parti- ' cularly remarked," in the sacred text, that the queen was sitting by the king, when Nehemiah obtained this grant, it sufficiently intimates that her favour was assisting to him herein. And accordingly a royal decree was issued out for the rebuilding of the walls and gates of Jerusalem, and Nehemiah was sent thither Avith it, as governor of the province of Judea, to put it in execution. And, to do him the more honour, the king sent a guard of horse with him, un- der the command of some of the captains of his army, to conduct him in safety to his government. And he wrote letters to all the governors on this side the River Euphrates, to further him in the work on which he was sent; and also gave his order to Asaph, the keeper of his forests in those parts, to allow him as much timber out of them as should be needed for the finishing of it. How- ever, the Ammonites, the Moabites, and the Samaritans, and other neighbour- ing nations round, did all they could to hinder him from proceeding therein. And to this they were excited, not only by the ancient and bitter enmity which those people bore to the whole Jewish nation, because of the different manners and different religions which they were of, but most especially at this time, be- cause of their lands: for during the time that the Jews were in captivity, these nations having siezed their lands, were forced to restore them on their return.^ For which reason they did aU they could to oppose their resettlement; hoping, that if they could be kept low, they might find an opportunity, some time or other, of resuming again the prey they had lost. But Nehemiah was not at all discouraged hereat: for having on his arrival at Jerusalem made known to the people the commission with which he was sent, he took a view of the ruins of the old walls, and immediately set about the repairing of them;' dividing the people into several companies, and assigning to each of them the quarter where they were to work; but reserving to himself the reviewal and direction of the whole: in which he laboured so effectually, that all was accomplished by the end of the month Elul,^ within the compass of fifty-two days, notwithstanding all manner of opposition that was made against him, both from within and from without. For, from within, several false prophets, and other treacherous per- si.iiii-, endeavoured to create him obstructions; and, from without, Sanballat the Kijt.nite, Tobias the Ammonite, Geshem the Arabian, and several others, gave h'H; all the disturbance they were able, not only by underhand dealings, and titiLlierous tricks and contrivances, but also by open force; so that, while part of the people laboured in carrying on the building, the other part stood to their arms to defend them against the assaults of such as had designs against them And all had their arms at hand, even while they worked, to be ready at a sig- nal ^nvcn, to ijra.w together to any part where the enemy should be discovered 1 >'-.lieRi. ii. 2 Ibid. u. C. 3 Joseplius Aatiq. lib. 11. c. 4. 4 Nehem. iii. iv 5 Aehera. vi. 2t)4 CONNEXION OF THE fflSTORY OF to be Coining upon them. And by this means they secured themselves against all the attempts and designs of their enemies, till the work was brought to a conclusion. And when they had thus far finished the walls, and set up the gates, a public dedication of them was celebrated with great solemnity by the priests and Levites, and all the people.' The burden which the people underwent in the carrying on of this work, and the incessant labour wliich they were forced to undergo, to bring it to so speedy a conclusion, being very great, and such as made many of them faint and groan under it,"'' and express a despair of being able to perfect it; to revive their drooping spirits, and make them the more easy and ready to proceed 'in that which was farther to be done,^ care was taken to relieve them from a much greater burden, the oppression of usurers; which they then in great miseiy lay under, and had much greater reason to complain of. For the rich, taking ad- vantage of the necessities of the meaner sort, had exacted heavy usury of them, making them pay the centesima for all monies lent them,'' that is, one per cent, for every month, which amounted to twelve per cent, for the whole year; so ■ that they were forced to mortgage their lands, and sell their children into ser- vitude, to. have wherewith to buy bread for the support of themselves and their families; which being a manifest breach of the law of God, given them by Moses (for that forbids all the race of Israel to take usury of any of their bre- thren,=') Nehemiah, on his hearing hereof, resolved forthwith to remove so great an iniquity: in order whereto he called a general assembly of all the people; where, having set forth unto them the nature of the offence, how great a breach it was of the divine law, and how heavy an oppression upon their brethren, and how much it might provoke the wrath of God against them, he caused it to be enacted, by the general suffrage of that whole assembly, that all should return to their brethren whatsoever had been exacted of them upon usury, and also release all the lands, vineyards, oliveyards, and houses, which had been taken of them upon mortgage on the account hereof. And thus far Nehemiah having executed the main of the end for which he obtained the favour of the king to be sent to Jerusalem, he appointed Hanani and Hananiah to be governors of the city, and returned again unto him into Persia. For a time had been set him for his return again to court,* when he first obtained to be sent from thence on this commission; which, as expressed m the text, plainly imports a short time, and not that of twelve years (after which he again went unto the king,^) as some do interpret it. And his having appointed governors of the city as soon as the walls were built, evidently im- plies, that he then went from thence, and was absent for some time: for, had he still continued at Jerusalem, he would not have needed any deputies to govern the place. And furthermore, the building of the walls of Jerusalem bemg all for which he prayed his first commission, when this was performed, he seems to have needed a new authority before he could go on to other proceedings which were necessary for the well settling of the affairs of that country. But, on his coming to the king, and having given him an account liow all things stood in the province, and what further was needful to be done for the well regulating of it, he soon obtained to be sent back again to take care hereof; and the shortness of his absence seems to have been the cause that there is no notice taken of it in the text, though the particulars I have mentioned seem sufficiently to im- ply it. ^;i. 441. Jlrtax. 21.] — Nehemiah being returned from the Persian court with i new commission, forthwith set himself to carry on the reformation of the church and the state of the Jews; which Ezra had begun, and took along with him the advice and direction of that learned and holy scribe in all that he at- tempted herein. The first thing that he did, was to provide for the security of the city, which he had now fortified, by settling rules for the opening and shut- INehera. xii. 2 Ibid. iv. 10. 3 Ibid. v. i Ibid. v. 11. Vide Salnia:;iiim de Ffcnoio I'rapesutieo 5 Exod. xxii. 25. Lcvit. xxv. 36, 37. Deut. xxiii. li). 6 Nehcm. ii. U. 7 Ibid. xiii. f. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 295 tin": ot the gates, and keeping watch and ward on the towers and walls. But finding Jerusalem to be but thinly inhabited,' and that, to make this burden more easy, there needed more inhabitants to bear their share with them in it, he projected the thorough repeopUng of the place. In order whereto, he pre- vailed first with the rulers and great men of the natioa to agree to build them houses there,- and dwell in them; and then others, following their example, offered themselves voluntarily to do the same. And of the rest of the people every tenth man was taken by lot, and obliged them to come to Jerusalem, and there build them houses, and settle themselves and families in them. And now the city was fortified, and all that had their dwellings in it were there well se- cured by walls and gates against the insults of their enemies, and the incursions of thieves and robbers, who before molested them, all willingly complied here- with; by which means the houses, as well as the walls and gates, being again rebuilt, and fully replenished with inhabitants, it soon after this recovered its ancient lustre, and became again a city of great note in those parts. So that Herodotus, who travelled through Judea, a little after this time, doth, in the de- scription which he gives us of it,^ compare it to Sardis, the metropolis of all the Lesser Asia,'' as hath been before observed; which manifestly proves, that by the restoring and building of the street and ditch of Jeri-salem, mentioned in the prophecy of Daniel, could not be meant this rebuilding of the walls and void places of the city: for what was predicted by that passage was not to be done but in seven weeks of years, that is, forty-nine years. It must be ac- knowledged, that Herodotus is said by Eusebius* to have publicly read his his- tory at Athens in the last year of the eighty-third Olympiad (that is, four hun- dred and forty-five years before Christ,) and by others'* to have gone the next year alter (which is this very year 444, of which we now treat,) v.'ith a colony of Athenians and other Greeks into Italy, to inhabit Thurium,'' a city then newly built near the place where formerly Sibaris stood; and therefore it ma}'' be from hence urged against what I have here said, that Herodotus must, before this time, have ended his travels, which he undertook for the making of this history, since this his history was finished and publicly read at Athens the year before. To this I reply, that though he had read the first draught of this his- tory at the time when Eusebius saith, yet he had not completed it till at least thirty-three years after; for therein he makes mention of the Peloponnesian war, and of things done in it,* in the second and also'' in the nineteenth year of that war; which last was the thirty-third year after that wherein he is said by Eusebius to have publicly read that history at Athens; and therefore it could not have been fully completed by him till after that year. The truth of the matter appears plainly to have been thus. In the year 445 before Christ, which was the last year of the eighty-third Olympiad, he did read his first draught of this history at Athens, being then thirty-nine years old, but employed all his life after farther to polish and complete it, and did not put his last hand to it till after the nineteenth year of the Peloponnesian war, which was the thirty- third after his first reading it at Athens. The next year after his having read it there, he went thence with the colony to Thm-ium, that is, in the first year of the eighty-fourth Olympiad, which was'" the three hundred and tenth of the building of Rome, according to the Varronian account, and" twelve years be- fore the beginning of the Peloponnesian war. And, on his settling in that place, he revised what he had publicly read at Athens, from whence it is that he is said by Pliny there to have made this history. And, after his having con- tinued some time at Thurium, he travelled from thence into the east, for the farther completing of this history, and also for the gaining of materials for ano- ther, which he was then composing, of Assyria and Babylon: but this last was 1 Nelifiin. vii. :}, 4. 2 Ibid. xi. 3 Ilerodot. lib. :i. initio libri. 4 See above, unrtcr Uie year 610 5 III Chroiiico, sub Olympiade 83. G Djofivsius Ilalicarnas^seiis in Vita I^ysia^Oiatoris. Pliiiins. lib. 1'2. c. 4 Strabo, lib. 14. p. C5t5. 7 nioil.'Sin. lib. 1'2. p. 7G— 78. 8 HorodDt. lib. 7. i) Ibid. lib. 9. 10 Plinius, lb. 12. c. 4. tl I'ionysius HalicarnasBCiisln Vita Lysix Oratoris. 296 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF never published,' though he refers to it in his other history now extant; the reason, it is supposed, was, that he lived not to finish it, though, 'by the above mentioned account, it appears he outlived the sevent3^-second year of his age, and, by other particulars in his history,^ it seems most likely that he lived much longer. And, I doubt not, it v.'as in those travels which he undertook from Thurium, that he went through Judea, and there saw Jerusalem, which he calls Cadytis; for that the city, which he describes under that name, could be none other than Jerusalem, I have already shown. Nehemiah finding it necessary to have the genealogies of the people well examined into, and clearly stated,^ betook himself in the next place to inquire into that matter. And this he did, not only for the sake of their civil rights, that all knowing of what tribe and family they were, they might thereby be directed where to take their possessions; but especially for the sake of the sanctuary, that none might be admitted to officiate there, either as Levites, which were not of the tribe of Levi, or as priests, which were not of the fa- mily of Aaron. And, therefore, for the true settling of this matter, search was made for the old registers; and having among them found a register of the ge- nealogies of those who came up at first from Babylon with Zerubbabel and Je- shua, he settled this matter according to it, adding such as afterward came up, and expunging others whose families were extinguished; and this hath caused the difference that is between the accounts which we have of these genealogies in Ezra and Nehemiah: for, in the second chapter of Ezra, we have the old register made by Zerubbabel, and in the seventh of Nehemiah, from the sixth verse to the end of the chapter, a copy of it as settled by Nehemiah, with the alterations I have mentioned. Ezra, having completed his edition of the law of God, and Avritten it out fairly and correctly in the Chaldean character,^ did this year, on the feast of trumpets, publicly read it to the people at Jerusalem. This feast was celebrated' on the first of Tisri, the seventh month of the Jews' ecclesiastical year, and th( . first of their civil year. Their coming out of Egypt having been in the montl of Nisan,*^ from that time the beginning of the year, in all ecclesiastical matters, was reckoned among them from the beginning of that month (which happened about the time of the vernal equinox:) but,'^ in all civil matters, as in contracts, bargains, and such like, they stiU continued to go by the old form, and began their year from the first of Tisri (which happened about the time of the au- umnal equinox,) as all other nations of the east then did (as hath been before ^' /<• 1 Nehem. ix. Vol. L— 38 298 CONNEXION OF THE .HASTORY OF best skilled in the law of God, to read it unto them in every city: which at first thfty did, no doubt, in the same manner as Ezra had done, that is, by gathering the people together to them in some wide street, or other open place of their city, which wa.^' of fittest capacity to receive them. But the inconvenience of this being soon felt, especially in the winter and stormy seasons of the year, for the remedy hereof they erected them houses or tabernacles, wherein tc meet for this purpose; and thi^ was the original of synagogues among them. That they had no synagogues before the Babylonish captivity is plain, not only from the silence which is of them in all the scriptures of the Old Testament, biiv also from several passages therein, which evidently prove there could be uone in those days. For, as it is a common saying among the Jews," that, where there is no book of the law, there can be no synagogue; so the reason of the thing proves it: for the main service of the synagogue being the reading of the law unto the people, where there was no book of the law to be read, there certainly could be no synagogue. But how rare the book of the law was through all Judah before the Babylonish captivity, many texts of scripture tell us. When Jehosaphat sent teachers through all Judah to instruct the people in the law of God, they carried a book of the law with them," which they needed not to have done, if there had been any copies of the law in those cities to Avhich they Avent: which certainly there would have been, had there been any synagogues in them; it being the same absurdity to suppose a Jewish syna- gogue without a copy of the law, as it would with us to suppose a parish church without a Bible. And, therefore, as this proves the want of the law through all Judah in those times, so doth it also the want of synagogues in them. And when Hilkiah found the law in the temple,^ neither he nor King Josiah needed have been so surprised at it, had books of the law been common in those times. Their behaviour on that occasion sufficiently proves they had never seen it be- fore, which could not be, had there been any other copies of it to be found among the people. And if there Avere no copies of the law at that time among them, there could then be most certainl}- no synagogues for them to resort to for the hearing of it read unto them. From hence it plainly follows, there could be no synagogues among the Jcavs, till after the Babylonish captivity. And it is most probable, that Ezra's reading to them the law, and the necessity which thereon they perceived there Avas of having it oftener read among them for their instruction in it, gave them the occasion of erecting them after the captivity, in the manner as I have related; and most learned men are of this opinion;"* and some of the JeAvs themselves say as much.* Concerning these synagogues, I think it proper here to inform the reader, 1st, In Avhat places they were to be erected; 2dly, What was the serAice to be performed in them; 3dly, What were the times of their assembling for thii service; and, 4thly, Who were -heir ministers to perform it. I. As to the first, their rule Avas, thai a synagogue was to be erected in every place*^ where there Avere ten Batehiim, tJiat is, ten persons of full age, and free condition, always at leisure to attend the service of it: for less than ten such, according to them, did not make a conCTeration, and without such a consreffa- tion present, no part of the synagogue service could be performed; and, there- fore, Avherever they could ahvay.^ be secure of such a congregation, that is, of ten such persons to be present at the serA'ice in all the stated times in which it was to be performed, there they Avere to build a synagogue. For Avhere ten such persons might ahvays be had at leisure to attend the synagogue in all their religious assemblies, this they reckoned a great city, and here they Avould have a synagogue to be built, but not otherAvise. For I take the rule above men- tioned to be restrictive in the negative sense, as well as obligatory in the affirma- i Mi.lrash Esther 12:i. 1. Tanchiima 54. 2. 2 2 Clirnn. xvii. J 3 2Kinss\\ii. 4 Speiirer de I^cfiibus Hfb. lib. 1. c. 4 s. 10. A'ilrin^a tie Sviiagoga A'etci?. iB. 1. part 2. c.9— 12. Kelaiidus ■p Antiq. Sarr. part I. c. 10. 5 Maiinnnides in Tcpbillab. (J ^'(■, J .,a c. 1. s. 2. Maininiiiiios in Tfpliillnh. Sec also Lightfoot, in his Harmony, s. 17. and in his Jaldud'ud. Lxercitations upon Matt. iv. 23. i THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 099 tiv8. and to show where a synagogue ought not to be built as well as where it ought, that is, that no synagogue ought to be built in any place, where there were not such a numLcr of inhabitants, as might give a reasonable presumption that there would be always ten persons at leisure to be present in every syna gogue assembly, and that as well on the week days as on the sabbaths, because, without such a number, they could not go on with the synagogue service. At iirst these synagogues were few, but afterward they became multiplied to a great number, in the same manner as parish churches with us, which they much re- sembled. So that in our Saviour's time there was no town in Judea, bi^t what had one or more of them. The Jews tell us, that about that time,' Tiberias alone, which was a city of Galilee, had twelve of them, and Jerusalem four hundred and eighty;'^ but herein they are supposed to have spoken hyperboli- cally, and to have expressed an uncertain large number by a certain. If this were to be understood strictly and literally, what is said by some of these ten Batelnim,^ that tney were the stationary men of the synagogue, hired to be al- ways present to make a congregation, must be understood of many of them; for, were their number so multiplied, they could not otherwise in every one of them be always sure of a congreoation, especially on the working days of the week, two of which were always solemn synagogue days, as well as the sab- baths. It is Lightfoot's opinion, that these ten Batelnim were the elders and ministers that governed and managed the synagogue service; but this is said without a sufficient foundation tc support it. II. The service to be performed in these synagogue assemblies, were prayers, • reading the scriptures, and preaching and expounding upon them. 1. For their prayers, they have liturgies, in which are all the prescribed forms of their synagogue worship. These at first were very few; but since they are increased into a very large bulk, which makes their synagogue service very long and tedious; and the rubric, by which they regulate it, is very perplexed and intricate, and encumbered with many rites and ceremonious observances; in all which they equal, if not exceed, both the superstition and also the length of the popish service. The most solemn part of their prayers are those which they cair Shemoneh Eshreh, i. e. the eighteen prayers. These, they say, were composed and instituted by Ezra and the great synagogue; and to them Rabbi Gamaliel, a little before the destruction of Jerusalem, added the nine- teenth, against the Christians, who are therein meant under the names of apos- tates and heretics. It is certain these prayers are very ancient; for mention is made of them^ in the Mishnah as old settled forms; and no doubt is to be made, but that they w^ere used in our Saviour's time, at least most of them,** if not all the eighteen; and consequently that he joined in them with the rest of the Jews, whenever he went into their synagogues, as' he always did every sabbath-day. And from hence two things may be inferred for the consideration of our dis- senters: 1st, That our Saviour disliked not set forms of prayer in public worship; and, 2dly, That he was contented to join with the public in the meanest forms, rather than separate from it. For these eighteen prayers, in comparison of those now used in our church, are very jejune and empty forms; and that the reader may see they are so, I shall here add a translation of them in tiie same order as they are in the Jewdsh liturgies, adding the nineteenth prayer to them; which, according to the said order, is the twelfth in number as here recited. 1. " Blessed be thou, 0 Lord our God, the God of our fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob, the great God, powerful and tre- mendous, the high God; bountifully dispensing benefits; the Creator and Pos- sessor of the universe, who rememberest the good deeds of our fathers, and in 1 Hoiachoth, f. 8. 2 See Liglilfoot's Clioro^rapliical Century, c. 36. 3 Riixlorfii Lexicon Rabhiniciiin, p. 2U'3. 4 Of these, sen Maitnoiiides in Tephillali, 5 In Beraclioth.c. 4. s. 3. t) It must be ackiiovvloilged, that some of these prayeis seem to have been cimiposed after llie destruction 4f Jerusalem, and to have reference to it, especially the lenlli, eleventh, fourteenth, .ind seventeenth; though it is possible some of these might refer to the calamities of the ancienter times. 7 Luke iv. IG. 300 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF thy love sendest a Redeemer to those Avho are descended from them for thy name's sake, O King, our Helper, our Saviour, and our Shield. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, who art the shield of Abraham. 2. " Thou, O Lord, art powerful for ever. Thou ralsest the dead to life, and art mighty to save: thou sendest down the dew, stillest the winds, and makest the rain to come down upon the earth, and sustainest with thy beneficence all that live therein; and of thy abundant mercy makest the dead again to live. Thou helpest up those that fall; thou curest the sick; thou loosest them that are bound, and makest good thy word of truth to those that sleep in the dust. Who is to be compared to Thee, 0 thou Lord of might? And who is like unto Thee, 0 our King, who killest and makest alive, and makest salvation to spring up as the herb out of the field? Thou art faithful to make the dead to rise again to life. Blessed art thou, O Lord, who raisest the dead again to life. 3. "Thou art holy, and thy name is holy, and thy saints do praise thee every day. Selah. For a great King and an holy art thou, 0 God. Blessed art thou, O Lord God most holy. 4. " Thou of thy mercy givest knowledge imto men, and teachest them un- derstanding; give graciously unto us knowledge, wisdom, and understanding. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, who graciously givest knowledge unto men. 5. " Bring us back, O our Father, to the observance of thy law, and make us to adhere to thy precepts; and do thou, O our King, draw us near to thy worship, and convert us to thee by perfect repentance in thy presence. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, Avho vouchsafest to receive us by repentance. 6. "Be thou merciful unto us, O our Fathei, for we have sinned; pardon us, 0 our King, for we have transgressed against thee: for thou art a God, good and ready to pardon. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, most gracious, who multipliest thy mercies in the forgiveness of sins. 7. " Look, we beseech thee, upon our afflictions. Be thou on our side in all our contentions, and plead thou our cause in all our litigations; and make haste to redeem us with a perfect redemption, for thy name's sake. For thou art our God, our King, and a strong Redeemer. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, the Redeemer of Israel. 8. " Heal us, 0 Lord our God, and we shall be healed. Save us, and we shall be saved; for thou art our praise. Bring unto us sound health, and a perfect remedy for all our infirmities, and for all our griefs, and for all our wounds. For thou art a God who healest, and art merciful. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord our God, who curest the diseases of thy people Israel. 9. " Bless us, 0 Lord our God, in every work of our hand, and bless unto us the seasons of the year, and give us the dew and the rain to be a blessing unto us upon the face of all our land; and satiate the world with thy blessings, and send down moisture upon every part of the earth that is habitable. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, who givest thy blessings to the years. 10. " Convocate us together by the sound of the great trumpet to the enjoyment of our liberty, and lift up thy ensign to call together all of the captivity, from the four quarters of the earth into our own land. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, Avho gatherest together the exiles of the people of Israel. 11. " Restore unto us our judges as at first, and our counsellors as at the begin- ning, and remove far from us affliction and trouble, and do thou only reign over us in benignity, and in merc}^ and in righteousness, and in justice. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord our King, Avho lovest righteousness and justice. 12. " ' Let there be Ao hope to them who apostatize from the true religion; and let heretics, how many soever they be, all perish as in a moment. And lef^ the kingdom of pride be speedily rooted out and broken in our days. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord our God, who destroyest the wicked, and bringest down the proud. 1 This is the prayer which was added by Kabbi Gamaliel ajjainslthe Chrisliaiis, or, as others say, by Rabbi Samuel the Little, who was one of liis scholars. 2 Til!; Roman empire THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. :J01 13. "Upon the pious and the just, and upon' the proselytes of justicf;, and upon the remnant of thy people of the house of Israel, let tliy mercies >>e . moved, O Lord our God; and give a good reward unto all who faithfully put their trust in thy name, and grant us our portion with them, and for ever let us not be ashamed; for we put our trust in thee. Blessed art tliou, 0 Lord, who art the support and confidence of the just. IJ. " Dwell thou in the midst of Jerusalem thy city, as thou hast proniised, build it with a building to last for ever; and do this speedily even in our days. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, who buildest Jerusalem. 15. " Make the offspring of David tliy servant speedily to grow up and flour- ish, and let our horn be exalted in thy salvation; for we hope for thy salvation every day. Blessed art thou, O Lord, who makest the horn of our salvation to flourish. 16. " Hear our voice, O Lord our God, most merciful Father, pardon and have mercy upon us, and accept of our prayers with mercy and favour, and send us not away empty from thy presence, 0 our King; for thou hearest with mercy the prayer of thy people Israel. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, who hearest prayer. 17. " Be thou well pleased, 0 Lord our God, with thy people Israel, and have regard unto their prayers: restore thy worship to" the inner part of thy house, aaid make haste with favour and love to accept of the burnt-sacrifices of Israel, and their prayers; and let the worship of Israel thy people be continually well- pleasing unto thee. Blessed art thou, O Lord, who restores! thy divine presence to Zion. 18. " We w^ill give thanks unto thee with praise; for thou art the Lord our God, the God of our fathers for ever and ever. Thou art our Rock, and the Rock of our life, the Shield of our salvation. To all generations will we give thanks unto thee, and declare thy praise, because of our life, which is always in thy hands, and because of our souls, which are ever depending upon thee, and because of thy signs, which are every day with us, and because of thy wonders and marvellous loving-kindnesses, which are morning and evening and night continually before us. Thou art good, for thy mercies are not consumed; thou art merciful, for thy loving-kindnesses fail not. For ever we hope in thee And for all these mercies be thy name, 0 King, blessed and exalted, and lifted up on high for ever and ever; and let all that live give thanks unto thee. Selah And let them in truth and sincerity praise thy name, 0 God of our salvation, and our help. Selah. Blessed art thou, O Lord, whose name is good, ana whom it is fitting always to give thanks unto. 19. " Give peace, beneficence, and benediction, grace, benignity, and mercy, unto us, and to Israel thy people. Bless us, 0 our Father, even all of us to- gether, as one man with the light of thy countenance. For in the light of thy countenance hast thou given unto us, 0 Lord our God, the law of life, and love, and benignity, and righteousness, and blessing, and mercy, and life, and peace. And let it seem good in thine eyes to bless thy people Israel with thy peace at all times, and in every moment. Blessed art thou, 0 Lord, who blessest thy people Israel with peace. Amen." Since our Saviour spared not freely to tell the Jews of all the corruptioii? which they had in his time run into, and on all occasions reproached then, therewith, had it been contrary to the will of God to use set forms of prayer in his public service, or had it been displeasing to him to be addressed in such mean forms, when much better might have been made; we may be sure he would have told them of both, and joined with them in neither. But he having 1 The ptostlytes of jiistico were such as received thtf whole Jewish law, and conformed in all things to their religion. Other proselytes there were, who conformed only to tlie seven precepts of the son« of Noali; and these were called the proselytes of the ijate, becanse they worshipped only in the outer court of the temple, and were admitted no farther than the gate le.iding into the inner courts. 2 t. e. The Adytum Tcmpli, which in the temple at Jerusalem was the Holy of Holies, into which none ever entered but the liio., that is, rulers of tlie synagogue. How" many of these were in every synagogue is no where said. But this is certain, they were more than one; for they are mentioned in scripture^ in the plural number in respect of the same synagogue; and, at Corinth,'^ Crispus and So^henes are both said to be chief rulers of the synagogue, though it is not likely liiat there was more than one synagogue in that city. Next to them (or perchance one of them) was tlie minister of the synagogue, that officiated in offering up the public prayers to God for the whole congregation, who, because he was the mouth of the congre- gation, delegated from them as their representative, messenger, or angel, to speak to God in prayer for them, was tlierefore, in the Hebrew language, called She- liach Zibbor, that is, the angel of the church. And hence it is, that the bishops of the seven churches of Asia are, in the Revelation, by a name borrowed from the synagogue, called the angels of those churches. For, as the Sheliach Zibboi in the Jewish sj-nagogue was the prime minister to offer up the prayers of the people to God, so also was the bishop the prime minister to offer up the prayers of the people to God in the church of Christ. The bishop, indeed, did not always officiate in his ministry, because in every church there were presbyters under him, who often discharged this duty in his stead. Neither did the She- liach Zibbor always discharge his duty in the synagogue in his own proper person. He was the ordinary minister appointed to this office; but often others were ex- traordinarily called out for the discharging of it, provided they were by age, gravity, skill, and piety of conversation, qualified -for it. And whosoever was thus appointed to this ministiy was the Sheliach Zibbor, that is, the angel of •the congregation, for that time; for the proper signification of the word used in the Hebrew language for an angel is a messenger. And therefore, as a messen- ger from God to the people is an angel of God, so a me.ssenger from the people to God IS an angel of the people. Li the latter sense only was the name of angel given to the minister of the synagogue: but it belongs to the minister of the Christian church in both senses; for he is not only a messenger of the peo- ple to God, in the offering up of the prayers of the congregation to him, but he is also a messenger of God to them, in bringing from him the messages of life, peace, and everlasting salvation, unto them. Next to the Shehach Zibbor were the deacons, or inferior mniisters of the synagogue, in Hebrew called Chaza- 1 Acts i. 13 Soo Mr. M.idn, bnok 0, tract 1. 'J Viilo Bujtlorlii Syiiasogam Judaicain, et Vitrinjram (ic Svnagofra Votere. :i Mark V. :!5— 37. Luke viii. 4J. xiii. 11. Acts xiii. 15. 4 Mark v. 22. Aclsxiii. 1"). j Acts .xviii. 8. 17- THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 307 .lirri; thit is, overseers, who were also fixed ministers, and, under the rulers of the synagogue, had the charge and oversight of all things in it, kept the sacred books of the law and the prophets, and other holy scriptures, as also the books of their public lituriges, and all other utensils belonging to the synagogue, and brought them fortli whenever they were to be used in the public service. And particularly they stood by, and overlooked them that did read the lessons out of the law and the prophets, and corrected them and set them right when they did read amiss, and took the book of them again when they had done. And thus it is said of our Saviour,' when he was called out to read the lesson out of the prophets in the synagogue of Nazareth, of which he was a member, that, after he had done, he gave the book again to the minister, that is, the Chazan or deacon of the synagogue. For there was anciently no fixed synagogue, min- ister for the reading of the lessons; but the rulers of the synagogue, when the time of the reading of those lessons came, called out any member of the con- gregation for this service that was able to perform it. And it was usually done in this order. A priest was called out first, and next a Levite, if any of these orders were present in the congregation, and after that any other Israelite, till they made up the number of seven. And hence it was anciently, that every section of the law was divided into seven lesser sections, for the sake of these seven readers. And, in some Hebrew Bibles, these lesser sections are marked in the margin; the first with the word Cohen, i. e. the priest; the second with the word Levi, i. e. the Levite; the third with the word Shelishi, i. e. the third; and so the rest, with Hebrew words signifying the numbers following, to the seventh: thereby to show what part was to be read by the priest, what by the Levite, and what by each of the other five, who might be any Israelites of the congregation that were able to read the Hebrew text, of what tribe soever they were. The next fixed officer of the synagogue, after the Chazanim, was the interpreter. His business was to intei-pret into Chaldee the lessons, as they were read in Hebrew, to the congregation; for which, learning and skill in both languages being requisite, when they found a man fit for the office, they re- tained him by a salary, and admitted him as a standing minister of the syna- gogue. When the blessing was to be given, if there were a priest present in the congregation, he always did the office; but if there were no priest then pre- sent, the Sheliach Zibbor, who did read the prayers gave the blessing also in a form made proper for him. Thus far I have thought it might be helpful to the reader, for his better understanding of the scriptures, to have laid before him a short scheme of the synagogue worship of the Jews, as it was among them in ancient times. That which they at present retain is in many particu- lars different from it. He that would be more fully informed of this matter may read Buxtorf's Synagoga Judaica, Yitringa de Synagoga VeterC; and above all Maimonides, especially in his tracts, Tephillah, Chagigah, and Kiriath Shcma. Those who think synagogues to have been before the Babylonish captivity, allege for it what is said in the seventy-fourth Psalm, ver. 8; "They have burnt up all the synagogues of God in the land." But in the original the words are col moadhe El, that is, all the assemblies of God; by which, I acknowledge, must be understood, the places where the people did assemble to worship God. But this doth not infer that those places were synagogues; and there are none of the ancient versions, excepting that of Aquila, that so render this passage. The chief place where the Israelites assembled for the worship of God was the temple at Jerusalem, and, before that was built, the tabernacle; and the open court before the altar was that part in both of them where the people assem- bled to offer up their prayers unto God. But those that lived at a distance from the tabernacle, while that was in being, and afterward from the temple, when that was built, not being able at all times to resort thither, they built courts like those in which they prayed at the tabernacle and at the temple, therein to c5er 1 Luke iv. 20. 308 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF up their prayers unto God, which in after'times we find called by the name ol ProseuchjE. Some of the Latin poets' make mention of them by this name; and into one of them our Saviour is said to have gone to pray, and to have con- tinued therein a whole night;^ and in another of them St. Paul taught the peo- ple of Philippi.' They differed from synagogues in several particulars; for, 1st, In synagogues the prayers were offered up in public forms in common for the whole congregation; but in the proseucha? they prayed, as in the temple, every one apart for himself; and so our Saviour'' prayed in the proseuchse which he went into. 2dly, The synagogues were covered houses; but the proseuchjB were open courts, built, saith Epiphanius,* in the manner of forums, which were open enclosures, where anciently at Rome, and in other cities under democrati- cal governments, the people used to assemble for the transacting of the busi- ness and affairs of the public: and such a proseuchse, Epiphanius tells us,^ the Samaritans had in his time near Shechem. 3d]y, Synagogues were all built within the cities to Avhich they did belong; but the proseuchse without, and mostly in high places, and that in which our Saviour prayed was on a moun- tain,' which makes it probable that these proseuchfe were the same which in the Old Testament are called high places: for these high places are not always condemned in scripture, but then only when they were made use of for idola- trous worship, or in a schismatical way, by erecting altars in them, in opposi tion to that which was in the place that God had chosen; otherwise they were made use of by prophets and good men,* as several instances hereof in scrip- ture do fully prove. And I am confirmed in this opinion, in that the proseu- chse had groves in or about them, in the same manner as the high places had. And no doubt the sanctuary of the Lord' in which Joshua did set up his pillai under the oak or oaken grove in Shechem, was such a proseuchae; and it is plain from the text that it had a grove of oaks in it.^ And the proseuchae which Philo makes mention of in Alexandria'" had such groves in or about them; ana that at Rome" in Egeria's grove was of the same sort. And perchance, where the Psalmist'^ makes mention of green olive trees in the house of God, such a proseuchae is there meant. And also such a one anciently was in Mispah,'* as the author of the first book of the Maccabees tell us. And all these were Moadhe El, and might be understood by that phrase in the Psalmist. It must be acknowledged, that, although some proseuch;* were still in being in our Sa- viour's time, yet by that time synagogues being made use of for the same pur- pose as the proseuchae were formerly, synagogues were then also called by the same name with the proseuchae: and so Josephus and Philo seem to use the word, though it seems from the latter, that some of the synagogues of the Jews in Alexandria were built after the same manner as the ancient proseuchae, with out roofs. And it makes this the more probable, that in Egypt, it never, or veiy sel- dom raining, they there stood more in need of open air in their public assem- blies, and trees to shelter them from the sun in that hot country, than of roofs over them to shelter them from the weather. And these, Philo'* complains, the Alex- andrians did cut down, when they there rose in a tumult against the Jews that then dwelt with them in that city. And. besides these proseuchae, there were other places to which the Israelites, before the captivity, frequently assembled, upon the account of religion; for the}-^ often resorted to the cities of the Levites, to be taught the ritual and other ceremonies of the Mosaical law, and to the schools of the prophets for all other instructions relating to the things of God, and to these last, it is plain from scripture,'^ that they usually resorted on the 1 Juv. Sal. 3. 2 Luke vi. 12. For what our English there renders, ^nd continued all night in prayer to God, is, in the on ginal, x»i tiu Ji»vuxTE/>!U(uv sv Tij llpod this cycle, did, from this time forward, celebrate THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 313 their Olympiads on the first full moon after the 27th day of our June; and thenceforth also began their year from the new moon preceding; whereas before they began it from the winter solstice; and they calculated both the new moon and the full moon by this cycle; so that from this time the new moon immedi- ately preceding the tii-st full moon after the summer solstice was the beginning of their year, and that first full moon aftfer the said solstice, in every fifth year, was the time of their Olympiads. For that year, in the beginning of which this solemnity was celebrated, was, in their computation of time, called the first year of that Olympiad, reckoning from the new moon preceding; and in the beginning of the fifth year after they celebrated the next Olympiad, which made the time from one Olympiad to another to be just four years, according to the measure of the years in use at that period. But this use of the cycle ceasing with the solemnities of the heathen Greeks after that Christianity had gotten the ascendant in the Roman empire, it thence- forth became applied to another use, and that not only by the Christians, but also by trie Jews: for by it the Christians, after the council of Nice, settled our Easter; and from them, some few years after, the Jews learned to make the hkf use of it for the fixing the time of their Passover, and the making of i.heir intercalations in order to it. But of the manner how each of them applied it lor these purposes, there will be hereafter an occasion fully to treat, in a place more proper for it. fin. 431. Ariax. 34.] — The war between the Athenians and Lacedemonians,' called the Peloponnesian war (of which Thucydides and Xenophon^ have written the history,) began about the end of the first year of the eighty-seventh Olym- piad, which lasted twenty-seven years. As soon as they had entered on it, both parties^ sent their ambassadors to King Artaxerxes to engage him on their hide, and pray his aid in the war. About the same time, there broke out a most grievous pestilence, which did overrun a great part of the world. It began first in Ethiopia; from thence it came into Lybia and Egypt, and from Egypt it invaded Judea, Phoenicia, and Syria; and from those parts it spread itself through the whole Persian empire: from whence it passed into Greece, and grievously afflicted the Athenian state destroying a great number of their people; and among them died Pericles,'' the chiefest and most eminent man of that city, whose wisdom, while he lived, was the main stay and support of that republic, and of whom only it can be said, that he maintained himself in full credit for forty years together in a popular govern- ment. Thucydides hath, m his history,* given us a very full account of this disease, having had thorough experience of it; for he had it himself, and after that, being out of danger of suffering any more by it, he freely visited a great many others that were afflicted with it, and thereby had sufficient opportujiity of knowing all the symptoms and calamities that attended it. Lucretius hath also given us a poetical description of it; and Hippocrates hath written of it as a physician:" for that great master of the art of physic lived in those times, ana was at Athens all the while this distemper raged there. Artaxerxes invited him, with the promise of great rewards, to come into Persia during this plague, to cure those who were infected with it in his armies. But his answer was, that he would not leave the Grecians, his countrymen, in this distress, to give his help to barbarians. There are several epistles still extant at the end of Hippo- crates' works, said to be written by Artaxerxes, and by Hystanes, his prefect on the Hellespont, and by Hippocrates himself, about this matter. Some think them not to be genuine, but do not give any reasons sufficient to convict them of it. Many instances in the histories of tliose times do acquaint us, how fond 1 Th'icydides, lib. 2. 2 Thucydides gives an account of Uie first twenty-one years of this war, and Xenophon's Hellenics roiiliniw whe Greek history from thence. 3 Thucydides, lib. 2. Ilerodot. lib. 7 ' • 4 PItitarchiis in I'ericle. Thuchydid-s lib. 2. Diod. Sic. lib. 12. p. 310. .•> Lib. 2. t) Lib. .3. Bpiriem. s. 3. Vol. L —40 314 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the Persians were of Greek physicians. And Artaxerxes, looking on himself as the greatest of kings, might well enough think he had the best title to have the greatest of j)hysicians to attend upon him, and therefore offered the greatest of rewards to draw him to him. But Hippocrates, having a mind above the tenjp- tations of gold and silver, returned him the answer I have mentioned; which provoked him so far, that he sent to C5s, the city of Hippocrates, and where he then was, to command them to deliver unto him Hippocrates, to be punished according to his perverseness; threatening them with the demolition of their city, and utter ruin of the whole island in which it stood, if they did not com ply with him herein. But the Coans, in their answer, did let him know that no threats should ever induce them to betray so eminent a citizen into his hands. This was before Hippocrates went to Athens* for this plague had ravaged through the Persian emj)ire before it came to that city; and it was not till the next year after this, that the Athenians were infested -with it, that is, in the second year of the Peloponnesian war, as Thucydides tells us. ■An. 428. Jlrtax. 37.] — Nehemiah, on his return to the Persian court, having tarried there about five years in the execution, as it may be supposed, of his former office, at length obtained of the king to be sent back again to Jerusalem with a new commission. The generality of chronologers, as well as the com- mentators upon this part of scripture, make this his coming back thither to be much sooner. But, considering the many and great corruptions which he tells us, in the thirteenth chapter of his book, the Jews had run into in his absence, it cannot be conceived how, in less than five years' time, they could have grown up to such a height among them. He had been twelve years reforming what was amiss among them, and Ezra had been doing the same for thirteen years before him, whereby they had brought their reformation to such a state and stability, that a little time could not have been sufficient in such a maaner to have again unhinged it. It is much more likely, that all this was longer than five years a doing, than that it should come to pass in so short a time. It is indeed expressed in our English version, that Nehemiah came back again from the Persian court, to Jerusalem,' " after certain days;" but the Hebrew word yamim, which is there rendered days, signifieth also years, and is in a great many places of the Hebrew scriptures so used. About this time, most likely, lived Malachi the prophet. The greatest of the corruptions which he chargeth the Jews with, are the same with those which they had run into in the time of Nehemiah' s absence; and therefore it is most probable, that in this time his prophecies were delivered. It is certain the tem- ple was all finished, and every thing restored therein, before his time: for there are passages in his prophecies which clearly suppose it; and he doth not in thejn charge the Jews with neglecting the restoring of the temple, but theii neglecting what appertained to the true worship of God in it. But in what time it was after the restoration of the temple that he prophesied, is no where said in scripture; and therefore we can only make our conjectures about it, and I know not where any conjecture can place it with more probability, than in tlie time where I hav^e said. Many things having gone wrong among the Jews during the absence of Ne- hemiah, as have been above mentioned, as soon as he was again settled in the government,^ he applied himself, with his usual zeal and diligence, to correct and again set to rights Avhatsoever was amiss. And that which he first took notice of, as what, by the flagrancy of the offence, as well as by reason of the place where committed, was the most obvious to be resented by so good a man, was a great profanation Avhich had been introduced into the temple for the sake of Tobiah an Ammonite.^ This man, though he had made two alliances with the Jews (for Johanan^ his son had married the daughter of Meshullam the son of Berachiah," who was one of the chief managers of the rebuilding of the wall of Jeruealem under the direction of the governor, and he himself had married th< 1 Nehera. xiii. 6. 2 Ibid. xiii. 3 Ibid. xiii. 7—9. 4 Ibid. vi. 18. 5 Ibid. iii. 1. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 3i5 daughter of Shecaniah the son of Arab, another great man among the Jews, yet being an Ammonite,' he bore a national hatred to all that were of the race of Israel; and therefore envying their prosperity, and being averse to whatsoever might promote it, did the utmost that he could to obstruct Nehemiah in all that he did for the good of that people, and confederated with Sanballat, their great- est enemy, to carry on his purpose. However, by reason of the aUiauces I have nientioned, he had many correspondents among the Jews," who were fa- vourers of him, and acted insiduously with Nehemiah on his account. But he, being aware of their devices, withstood and bafHed them all, as long as he con- tinued at Jerusalem. But when he went from thence to the Persian court, Eliashib the high-priest^ was prevailed with (as being one of those that were of that confederacy and alliance with Tobiah) to allow and provide for him lodg- ings within the temple itself: in order whereto he removed "the meatofferings, the frankincence, and the vessels, and the tithes of the corn, the new wine, and the oil (which w^as commanded to be given to the Levites, and the singers and the porters,) and the offerings of the priests," out of the chambers where they used to be laid; and out of them made one large apartment for the reception of this heathen stranger. It is doubted by some, whether this Eliashib were Eliashib the high-priest, or only another priest of that name. That which raiseth the doubt is, he is named in the text, where this is related of him, by the title only of priest, and is there said to have the oversight of the chambei's of the house of God; irom whence it is argued, that he was only chamberlain of the temple, and not the high-priest, who was above such an office. But the over- sight of the chambers of the house of God may import the whole government of the temple, wdiich belonged to the high-priest only: and it is not to be con- ceived, how any one, that was less than an absolute governor of the whole tem- ple, could make so great an innovation in it. Besides, Eliashib the high-priest hath no character in scripture with which such a procedure can be said to be mconsistent. By what is said in the book of Ezra (chap. x. 18,) it appears the pontifical family was in his time grown very corrupt. And no act of his is mentioned either in Ezra or Nehemiah, excepting only his putting to his help- ing hand in the repairing of the walls of Jerusalem. Had he done any thing else w^orthy of memory in the reforming of what was amiss, either in church oi state, in the times either of Ezra or Nehemiah, it may be presumed mention would have been made of it in the books written by them. The silence which •s of him in both these books, as to any good act done by him, is a sufficient proof, that there was none such to be recorded of him. For the high-priest being the head of the Jewish church, had he borne any part with these two good men, when they laboured so much to reform that church, it is utterly improbable that it could have been passed over in their writings, wherein they give an account of what was done in that reformation. What Jeshua his grandfather did in con- currence with Zerubbabel the governor, and Haggai and Zechariah the pro- phets, in the first re-settling of the church and state of the Jew's, after their re- turn from the Babylonish captivity,'' is all recorded in scripture; and had Elia- shib done any such thing in concurrence with Ezra and Nehemiah, we may take it for certain it would have been recorded there also. Putting all this to- gether, it appears most likely that it was Eliashib the high-priest who was the author of this great profanation of the house of God. What was d.one herein, the text tells us, Nehemiah immediately understood, as soon as he came back again to Jerusalem, and he did immediately set himself to reform it. For, over- ruling what the high-priest had ordered to be done herein, by the aiuhority which he had as governor, he commanded all the household-stuff of Tobiah to be cast out, and the chambers to be again cleansed and restored to their for- mer use. The reading of the law to the people hating been settled b}' Nehemiah,* so 1 Nehem. ii. iv. vi 2 Ibid. vi. 17— 19. 3 Ibid. xiii. 4. 4 Ezra iii, iv. v. H.i'r'.ii i- ii- Zoch. iij S Nehcm. viii. 316 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF as to be constantly carried on at certain stated times, ever since it was begun, under his government, by Ezra (perchance from that very beginning on every sabbath-day,) Avhen, in the course of their lessons, they came to the twenty- third chapter of Deuteronomy, where it is commanded, that " a Moabite, or an Ammonite, should not come into the congregation of the Lord, even to the tenth generation, for ever;" Nehemiah,' taking a handle from hence, separated all the mixed multitude from the rest of the people, that thereby it might be known with whom a true Israelite might lawfully marry. For neither this law, nor any other of the like nature is to be understood to exclude any one, of what nation soever he were, from entering into the congregation as a proselyte, and becoming a member of their church, that would be converted thereto. Neither did any of the Jews ever so interpret it: for they freely received all into their religion that would embrace it, and, immediately on their conversion, admitted them to all the rites, parts, and privileges of it, and treated them in all respect in the same manner as true Israelites, excepting only in the case of marriage. And therefore this phrase in the text,^ of "not entering into the congregation of the Lord, even to the tenth generation," must be understood to include no more than a prohibition not to be married thereinto till then; and thus all the Jewish doctors expound it: for their doctrine, as to the case of their marrying with such as were not of their nation, is stated by them in manner as followeth: — None of the house of Israel of either sex were to enter into marrriage with any Gentiles, of Avhat nation soever,' unless they were first converted to tneir religion, and became entire prosel^^tes to it. And, when they were become tnu? thorough proselytes, they were not all immediately to be admitted to this prvi- lege of making intermarriages with them; for some were barred wholly from it for ever, others only in part, and some only for a limited time. Of the first sort were all of the seven nations of the Canaanites, mentioned in Deut. vi'. Of the second sort were the Moabites and the Ammonites, whose males, they hold, were excluded for ever, but not their females: for the Hebrew text na- ming an Ammonite and a Moabite, in the masculine gender only, they under- stand it only of the males, and not of the females. And this exception they make for the sake of Ruth; for she, though a Moabitish wonjan, had been mar^ ried to two husbands of the house of Israel, the last of which was Boaz, of whom David was descended by her. And of the third sort were the Edomites and the Egyptians,'* with whom they might not marry till the third generation. With all others, who were not of the three excepted sorts, they might freely make intermarriages whenever they became thorough proselytes to their religion.* But at present,^ it not being to be known, who is an Edomite, who an Ammonite, era Moabite, or who an Egyptian of the race of the Egyptians then mentioned in the text, by reason of the confusions which have since happened of all nations •with each other, they hold this prohibition to have been long since out of date; and that now any Gentile, as soon as proselyted to their religion, may imme- diately be admitted to make intermarriages with them. In interpreting the ex- clusion of the Ammonites and Moabites in the text to be for ever, they seem to exceed the prohibition of the law therein delivered; for there (?". e. Deut xxiii. 3,) it is extended only to the tenth generation. The words are, " Even to the tenth generation shall they not enter into the congregation of the Lord for ever." The meaning of which seems plainly to be, that this should be observed as a law for ever, that an Ammonite or a Moabite was not to be admitted into the congregation of Israel, so as to be capable of making marriages with them, till the tenth generation after their becoming proselytes to the Jewish religion. But ten generations, and for ever, being both in the same text, and within the same prohibiting clause, they interpret the former expression by the latter, and will have it, that so long a prohibition as that of ten generations, signifieth there 1 Chap. xiii. 1—3 2 Deut. xxiii. 3. 3 Maiinonidps in IssureBiah 4 Deut. xxiii. 8. 5 A si,.;fer of David's married Illira, an Ishinaelile, by wliom she was mother of Aniasa, captain of the host of Israel. G Maimonidc!) in Issurc Biab. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 317 in tantamount to for ever; and they ground this chiefly upon the text of Nehe- miah, which we are now treating of. For here, in the recital of this law, the prohibition is said to be for ever, without the limitation often generations. But the words of Nehemiah are plainly an imperfect quotation of what is in the law, and seem to intend no more by that recital, than to send us to the place in the original text of the law, where it is to be perfectly found. And in all laws in the world, the words of the original text are to be depended upon, for the in- tention of the lawgiver, before any quotations of them, by whomsoever made. Among other corruptions that grew up during the absence of Nehemiah, one especially to be taken notice of was the neglect of the carrying on of the daily service of the house of God in such manner as it ought.' For the tithes, which were to maintain the ministers of the temple in their offices and stations, being either embezzled by the high-priest, and other rulers of the temple under him^ or else subtracted by the laity, and not paid at all, for want of them the Levites and singers were driven from the temple, every one to his own home, there to seek for a subsistence some other way. This abuse the governor, whose piety led him always to attend the public worship, could not be long without taking notice off, and when he had observed it, and thoroughly informed himself of the cause, he soon provided very effectually for its remedy: for he forthwith made those dues to be again brought into the treasuries of the temple, and forced every man faithfully and fully to pay them: whereby a maintenance being again provided for those that attended the service of the house of God, all was there again restored to its pristine order. And he also took care that the sabbath should be duly observed," and made many good orders for the preventing of the profanation of it, and caused them all to be effectually put in execution. But, though all these things are mentioned in one chapter, they were not all done at one time; but the good man brought them about as occasions were administered, and as he saw opportunities best served for the successful effecting of them. In this same year in which we suppose Nehemiah came back again to his government of Tudea from the Persian court, that is,^ in the first year of the eighty-eighth Olympiad, was born Plato, the famous Athenian philosopher, who came nearest to the truth in divine matters of any of the heathens: for he hav- ing, in his travels into the east, where he went for his improvement in know- ledge, conversed wdth the Jews, and gotten some insight into the writings of Moses,'' and their other sacred books, he learned many things from them, which others of his profession could not attain unto: and therefore he is said by Nu- menius* to be none other than Moses speaking Greek; and many of the ancient fathers speak of him to the same purpose.** An. 426. Jlrtax. 39.] — In the sixth year of the Peloponnesian war,' the plague broke out again at Athens, and destroyed great numbers of their people. This, with the other plague that happened four years before, having much exhausted that city of its inhabitants, for the better replenishing of it again, a new law was made to allow every man there to marry two wives.® From the time of Cfccrops, who was the first planter of Attica, and the founder of the city of Athens in it, no such thing as polygamy was there ever known, or was any man allowed to have any more than one wife, both their law and their usage till now being contrary tliereto. But from this time it was allowed, for the cause which I have mentioned; and Socrates the philosopher was one of the first that made use of the privilege of it, being then forty-three years old; for he was born in the last year of the seventy-seventh Olympiad (which was the year 469 before Christ;) for to Xantippe, his former wife, he took another called Myrto; and all the benefit he had by it, was to have two scolds, instead of one, to exercise his patience. As long as they disagreed," they were continually 1 Nehcm. xiii. 10—14. Malachi iii. 8—13. 2 Nelieiii. xiii. 15—2:!. 3 Diogenes Laertius in Vita Plutoni:i. 4 Josepliiis contra Apioncm, lib. 2 Aristobulus apud Euscbiiim de I'rxparatione Evangclica. i Clem. Alexandr. Strom. 1. Siiidasin N»V;uni/io{. 6 Vide Menagii Ohservatione.s ad tertiiim Libriim Diog. La'^rtii, Scgm. G. 7 Thncydides, lib. .3. 8 Athensus, lib. 1.1. Diog. Lacrt. inSocratc. 9 Diog. Laert. in Socrate. 3J8 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF scolding, brawling, or fighting with each other; and whenever they agreed, they both joined in brawling at him, and often fell on him with their fists as well as with their tongues, and beat him soundly.' And this was a very just punish- ment upon him, for giving countenance, by his practice, to so unnatural and mischievous a usage. For every where more males than females being born into the world, this sufficiently proves, that God and nature never intended any more than one woman for one man; and they certainly act contrary to the laws of both, that have more than one to wife at the same time. Although the su- preme Lawgiver dispensed with the children of Israel in this case, this is no rule for others to act by. ^n. 425. Artax. 40.] — In the seventh )'ear of the Peloponnesian war, Artax- erxes sent an embassador,' called Artaphernes, to the Lacedemonians, with let- ters written in the Assyrian language; wherein, among other things, he tells them, that several embassadors had come to him from them, but with messages so differing, that he could not learn from them what it was that they would have; and that therefore he had sent this Persian to them, to let them know, that if they had any thing to propose to him, they should, on his return, send with him to his court some by whom he might clearly understand what their mind was. But this embassador being got on in his way as far as Eion, on the River Strymon m Thracia, he was there taken prisoner, about the end of the year, by one of the Admirals of the Athenian fleet, who sent him to Athens; where the Athenians treated him w ith much kindness and respect, thereby tJie better to reconcile to them the favour of the Persian king. Jin. 424. Artax. 41.] — And the next year after, as soon as the seas Avere safely passable, they sent him back in a ship of their own, at the public charges,' and appointed some of their citizens to go with him as embassadors from them to the king; but when they w^ere landed at Ephesus, in order to this journey, they there understood that Artaxerxes was lately dead; whereon the embassadors proceeded no farther, but, having there dismissed Artaphernes, returned again to Athens. Artaxerxes died within three months after the beginning of the forty-first year of his reign, and was succeeded in his kingdom by Xerxes,^ the only son that he had by his queen. But by his concubines he had seventeen others, among whom were Sogdianus (by Ctesias, called Secundianus,) Ochus, and Ar- sites. Xerxes having made himself drunk at one of their festivals, and thereon being retired to sleep it out in his bedchamber, Sogdianus took the advantage of it, by the help and treachery of Pharnacyas, one of Xerxes' eunuchs, then to fall upon him, and slew him, after he had reigned only forty-five days, and succeeded him in the kingdom. And, as soon as he w^as on the throne, he put to death Bagorazus, the faithfullest of his father's eunuchs. Artaxerxes being dead, and his queen, the mother of Xerxes, dying also the same day, Bagorazus undertook the care of their funeral, and carried both their corpses to the accus- tomed burial-place of the royal family in Persia. But, on his return, Sogdia- nus being on the throne, he was very ill received by him, on the account of some former quarrel that had been between tliem in his father's lifetime; in re- venge whereof, a little after., taking pretence from something which he found fault with in the management of his father's funeral, he caused him to be stoned to death; by which two murders, that of his brother Xerxes, and this of the faithful eunuch, having made himself very odious to the army, as well as the nobility, he soon found that he sat very unsafe upon the throne which he had so wickedly gotten possession of. Whereon growing jealous and suspicious, lest some of his brothers should serve him as he had served Xerxes, and fearing Ochus, whom his father had made governor of Hyrcania, more than all the rest, he sent for him to come to court, with intention to rid himself of him, by putting him to death. But Ochus perceiving what his designs v/ere, under se- veral pretences, from time to time, delayed his coming, till at length, having I Porpliyrius apud Tlieodoretum. 2 Thucydidos, lib, 4. 3 Ibid. 4 Ctesias. niori. Sir. lib. 12. p. 319 Si2. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 319 got together a powerful army, he marched acrainsthim, for the revengin<; (as he declared) the death of his brother Xerxes; whereon many of the nobility, and several governors of j)rovinces, who w'cre disgusted with the cruelty and mis- management of Sogdianus, revolted from him and W'ent over to Ochus, and having put the royal tiara upon his head, declared him king. Sogdianus, seeing himself thus deserted, fell into great fear of the power of his brother, and having less courage to defend what he had wickedly done, than he had to commit it, was prevailed upon, contrary to the advice of the wisest and best of his friends, to come to a treaty with Ochus; who, having hereby gotten him into his power, cast him into ashes, and there made him die a most cruel death. This was one of the punishments of the Persians,' whereby great criminals among them were put to death. The manner of it is described in the thirteenth chapter of the second book of the Maccabees to be thus: — A high tower being filled a great way up with ashes, the criminal was, from the top, thrown do\vn headlong into them, and there had the ashes, by a wheel, continually stirred up and raised about him, till he was suffocated by them and died. And thus this wicked prince with his life lost his emjaire, after he had held it only six months aiid fifteen days. An. 4'23. Dar. J\''othus 1.]— Sogdianus being thus despatched, Ochus obtained the kingdom; and as soon as he was settled in it," he changed his name, taking that of Darius instead of Ochus, and is the same Avhom historian's call Darius Nothus. He reigned nineteen years, and is in Ptolemy's Canon placed as the next immediate successor of Artaxerxes Longimanus, according to tHb method of that Canon, which always reckons to the predecessor the whole last year in which he died, and placeth him as the next successor who was on the throne in the beginning .of the year following (as hath been already observed;) and both the reio-ns of Xerxes and Sogdianus makingr but eio^ht months, and these not reaching to the end of the year in which Artaxerxes died, their reigns, in that Canon, are cast into the last year of Artaxerxes, and Darius is placed next him, as if he had been his immediate successor. But it not being the usage of the Persian kings, on their accession to the throne, to displace any of the governors of provinces, unless they were such as they had just reason to mistrust, Nehemiah, dviring all these revolutions in the empire, continued still in his government of Judea, and went on with the same zeal and vigour to reform it in all things relating either to church or state, and to correct and set all at rights that was amiss in either of them. An. A'^'l. Dar. J\'othus 2.] — Arsites, seeing how Sogdianus had supplanted Xerxes, and Ochus Sogdianus, thought to do the same with Ochus. And there- fore, though he was his brother by the same mother, as w^ell as by the same father,^ rebelled against him; and Artyphius, the son of Megabyzus, joined with him in this revolt. Ochus, now called Darius, sent against Artyphius, Artasyras one of his generals, while he with another army marched against Arsites. Artyphius vanquished his adversary in two battles by the help of his Grecian mei'cenarics. But these being bribed over to Artasyras, he lost the third battle; and thereby being reduced to the utmost difficulty, he surrendered, on hopes given him of mercy, into the hands of Darius, who would immedi- ately have put bim to death, but that he w^as dissuaded from it by Parysatis his queen. She was one of the daughters of Artaxerxes his father by another mother, and a very subtle, crafty woman, and whose counsel and advice he chiefly depended upon in the management of all his affairs. Her advice on the present occasion was, to treat Artyphius with all manner of clemency, that by such usage of a rebel servant, ho might the better encourage his rebel bro- ther to hope for the same favour, and cast himself upon his mercy; and that, if he could this way decoy him into his power, he might then deal with both as he should think fit. Darius following this advice, had that success in it ] Concerning tlio first invention of tliis piinishmnn't, sco Valerius Maximus, lib. 0. c. 2. Exter. s. fi 2 Clesias. Died. Sic. lib. 12. p. 322. Ptol. Can. 3 Ctesias 320 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORTf OF whiiih was proposed: for Arsites, being informed with what clemency Artyphi- us wa? treated, thought he, as a brother, might be favoured much more; and therefore, commg to terms with the king, yielded himself unto him. But, when he had thus got him into his power, ht cast both him and Artyphius into the ashes, and there made them both miserably perish. Darius was much inclined to have spared Arsites; but he was overruled herein by the advice of Parysatis, who pressed it upon him, that he could no otherwise provide for his own safety, out by the death of this rebel. Arid the force of this argument prevailed with him, though with great difficulty, to consent to it. They being both born of the same mother, this was the cause of the tenderness which he had for him. He also put to death Pharnacyas the eunuch, for the hand which he had in the death of Xerxes; and Monasthenes, another eunuch, who was the chief confidant of- Sogdianus, and also concerned Avith him in his treachery against h's brother, was forced to kill himself to avoid the punishment of a much se- verer death which was intended for him. But all these executions did not set Darius at quiet upon his throne. For many other troubles were raised against him afterward. An. 414. Dar. JVolhus 10.] — The chiefest and the most dangerous of them was the rebellion of Pisuthnes,' who, being made governor of Lydia, did there set up for himself, and cast off his obedience to the king; to which he was chiefly encouraged by the confidence which he placed in an army of merce- nary Greeks, whom he had got together into his service, under the command of Lycoil an Athenian. Against him Darius sent Tissaphernes with an army to suppress the rebel, and also with a commission to be governor of Lydia in his stead. Tissaphernes, being a very crafty and insidious man, found ways to get within Pisuthnes's Grecian mercenaries, and having, with large gifts, and larger promises, corrupted both them and their general to change sides, they deserted Pisuthnes, and went over to Tissaphernes, whereby Pisuthnes being left too weak any longer to carry on his designs, was persuaded, on promises made him of pardon, to trust to them, and surrender himself; but as soon as he was brought to the king, he caused him to be cast into the ashes, and there perish in the same manner as had been the fate of the other rebels before him. However, this did not put an end to the troubles which he had raised in those parts; for Amorgas- his son still continued in arms with the remaining part of his army, and for about two years after infested the maritime provinces of Lesser Asia, till at length being taken prisoner by the Peloponnesians at lasus, a city of Ionia, he Avas delivered to Tissaphernes, and put to death. The next disturbance which Darius had,^ was from Artoxares, the chief of the eunuchs. He had three eunuchs, by whose ministry he governed all the affairs of his empire; these were Artoxares, Artibarxanes, and Athous; and. next Parysatis his queen, he placed his greatest confidence in them, and trusted to their counsel and advice above all others, in Avhatsoever he did, through all the emergencies of the go\'ernment. By Avhich height of authority Artoxares being intoxicated, from being chief minister, he at length began to dream of making himself chief governor of the empire, and laid designs of cutting off Darius, and seizing the throne for himself. And that his being an eunuch might be no ob- stacle to him herein, he married a wife, and wore an artificial beard, that he might be thought to be no eunuch. But his Avife knoAving the whole plot, and being perchance weary of a husband whom she found to be truly an eunuch in her bed, whatsoever he pretended to be out of it, discovered all to the king: whereon he Avas taken into custody, and deliA^ered over into the hands of Paiy- satis, who caused him to be put to death in such manner as would best satia'e her cruelty, in Avhich she exceeded all Avomen living. But the greatest misfortune that befel Darius during all his reign, was (iit revolt of Egypt," Avhich happened in the same year with the revolt of Pisuthiv^c For although Darius again mastered the latter of these rebellions, he never ccvil '•■ \ Ctesias. 2 Thucydides, lib. 8. 3 Ctesias. 4 Eusebius in Chronico. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. gjl the other. But the whole province of Egypt, which was one of the best of the whole Persian empire, was lost unto him all the remaining part of his reign, as it also was to his successors, till it was again reduced by Ochus, as will be here- after related. For the Egyptians being weary of the Persian yoke, Amyrtaius Saites took the advantage of it, and sallied out of his fens, where he had reigned ever since the suppression of Inarus's revolt, and, being joined by the other Egyptians, soon drove the Persians out of the country, and made himself king of all Egypt, and reigned there six years. About this time happened at Athens the condemnation of Diagoras the Me- iian. He having settled in that city, and there taught atheism,' the Athenians prosecuted him for it. But, by flying out of that country, he escaped the pun- ishment of death, which was intended for him, although not the sentence. For the Athenians, having in his absence condemned him for his impious doctrine, did set a price upon his head, and decreed the reward of a talent to whosoever should kill him, wheresoever he should be found. And about twenty years be- fore- they had proceeded against Protagoras, another philosopher, with the like severity, for only doubting of the being of a God. For in the beginning of one of his books, he having written thus: — " Of the gods I know nothing, neither that they are, nor that they are not. For there are many things that hinder, the blindness of our understanding, and the shortness of human life:" the Athenians would not endure so much as the raising of a doubt about this matter; but, call- ing in all his books by the common criers of their city, they caused them all publicly to be burnt with infamy, and banished the author out of their territories for ever.. Both these had been the scholars of Democritus, the first founder of the atoraical philosophy, which is indeed wholly an atheistical scheme. For though it allows the being of a God in name, it takes it away in effect; for by denying the power of God to create the world, and the providence of God to govern the world, and the justice of God to judge the world, they do the same in effect as if they had denied his being. But this they durst not openly do, even among the heathens, for fear of punishment; the greater shame is it to us, who, in a Christian state, permit so many impious wretches to do this thing among us, with a free liberty and absolute impunity. An. 413. Bar. Jfothus 11.] — Eliashib, the high-priest of the Jews, died in the eleventh year of Darius Nothus, after he had held that pontificate forty years, and was succeeded in it by Joiada his son.^ Jin. 4 1'i. Dar. JSTothus 1*2.] — At this time Tissaphernes was governor of Lydia and Ionia,'' and Pharnabazus of the Hellesponl;, for King Darius;^ who being men of great craft, and also of great application for the prosecuting the interest of their prince, were not wanting to make the best advantage they could of the divisions of the Greeks, for the promoting of the welfare of the Persian empire. The Peloponnesian war had now been carried on between the Lacedemonians and the Athenians to the twentieth year. The policy practised herein by these two Persians was, sometimes to help one, and sometimes the other, that the matter being equally balanced between them, neither might, by suppressing the other, be at leisure to trouble them, who had so long been the common enemy of both. And therefore, at this time, the Athenians seeming to them to have the ascendant over the other in the fortune of the war, especially on the Asian coasts, and having there much provoked them by the auxiliaries which they had sent under the command of Lycon, for the aiding and supporting of Pisiithnes in his revolt, they entered into an alliance with the Lacedemonians against them. This had been treated of with them by Tissaphernes, the former year, but now was, by the consent of both governors, agreed to, whereby the Persians were obliged to furnish the Lacedemonians with large subsidies for the payment of their fleet; and the Lacedemonians, in consideration hereof, yielded, IJnsi'plius cniitra Apinni'in, lib. 2. Aristophanes in Avilms. Ilesychiiis Milesiiis. • 2 Ding. LacTt.iii I'mta'.'ora. Joscplmscoiitra Apioiipin, lib. 2. CicfirodeNaturaDeorui.i lib. 1 3 ^fr!ll.1ln. xu. Jos,:phiis, lib. 11. c. 7. Clironicon AloxaiKlriiium. 4I)io(l. Sic. lib. i:). Ctcsias Thucydides, lib. 8, IHutarchus in Alcib. Vol. I.— 41 3$J2 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORV^ OF that the Persian king should have all those countries and cities which he or his ancestors had at any time before the date of the treaty been possessed of. But when this treaty came to 4. •'' Herps. 9 6 IVinral. in Job, lib. 1. c. 15. 7 Dent. xii. 5. II. 14. 18. 26. xv. 26. xvi. C. 0. 7. 15, 10. &r 8 IChron. xxii. 9 1 Kings viii. 10. 2 Chron. vii. 1— "3. Vol. I. —42 ^30 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORV OF crated it by the habitation of his Divine presence therein, and there all the tribes of Israel that adhered to the true worship of God offered up their sacrifices, and there the temple was again rebuilt after the Babylonish captivity, and the same service there carried on in a unity and uniformity of worship by all that nation, till Manasseh made the schism that hath been mentioned, and, flying to Samaria, did there set up altar against altar, and temple against temple: for, after he had built that temple on Mount Gerizim, and therin erected an altar in opposition to that at Jerusalem, the Samaritans and apostate Jews who revolted to them would no longer allow Jerusalem to be the place which God had chosen; but contended, that Mount Gerizim was that place, and argued for it in the same manner as the woman of Samaria did unto our Saviour, that is, that their fathers worshipped in that mountain: for they plead, that there Abraham' and Jacob* built altars unto God, and, by their offering up of sacrifices on them, consecrated that place above all others to his worship; and that therefore it was appointed by God himself to be the hilP of blessing, on the coming of the children of Israel out of Egypt; and that accordingly Joshua, on his entering the land of Canaan, had caused the blessings of God to be declared thereon, and also that, on his having passed the River Jordan, he built an altar on it of twelve stones, taken out of that river in his passage,* according as God had commanded by Moses: and this they hold to be the very altar upon which they stiU sacrifice on that mountain even to this day. But, to make out this last part of the argu- ment, and thereby reconcile the greater veneration to Mount Gerizim, and their place of worship thereon, they have been guilty of a very great prevarication in corrupting the text: for whereas the command of God is (Deut. xxvii. 4,) that they should set up the altar upon Mount Ebal, they have there made a sacrile- gious change in the text, and instead of Mount Ebal, have put Mount Gerizim, the better to serve their cause by it. This corruption the Jews loudly charge them with, and the Saw.aritans do as loudly retort it upon them; and say, tha* the Jews have corrupted the text in that place, by putting Mount Ebal in their copies, where it should be Mount Gerizim; and bring this argument for it, that Mount Gerizim having been the mountain that was appointed whereon to declare the blessings of God, and Mount Ebal whereon to denounce curses, the mountain of blessing was very proper, and the mountain of cursing very im- proper, for an altar of God to be built upon. But, notwithstanding this allega- tion in their behalf, all other copies and translations of the Pentateuch make against them, and prove the corruption to be on their side. And it very much aggravates their guilt herein, that they have not only corrupted the Scriptures in this place, but have also interpolated them with this corruption in another, that is, in the twentieth chapter of Exodus, where,* after the tenth command- ment, they have subjoined by way of an additional precept thereto, words taken out of the eleventh and twenty-seventh chapters of Deuteronomy to com- mand the erecting of the altar in Mount Gerizim, instead of Mount Ebal, and the offering of sacrifices to God in that place. And in that they have thus voluntarily made a corrupt alteration in one place, and a corrupt addition in another, merely out of design to serve an iU cause: this gives the less authority to their copy in all other places, where, either by alterations or additions, it differs from that of the Jews. These two mountains, called Gerizim and Ebal, are in the tribe of Ephraim, near Sarriaria; and in the valley between them lieth Shechem, now called 1 Gen. xii. 0,7. xiii. 4. 2 Gen. x.wiii. 20. :? Dcut. xxvii. 12. 4 Ibiil. 2—7. 5 The words added by tlie Samaritans after the tenth commandment, in the twentieth chapter of Exodus, aic as follow:—" Andit shall be. when the Lord thv God hath brought thee into the land of the Canaanites, whither thou gocst to possess it. that thou shalt set up great stones, and plaster them with plaster, and ihou Shalt write upon these stones all the words of this law. And it shull be, when ye are gone over Jordan, that ye shati set up these stones, wliich I command you this day, in Mount Gerizim, and thou shalt build there an altar unto the Lord thy God, an altar of stones. Thou shalt not lift up an iron tool upon them. Thou shalt build the ultai of the Lord thy God of whole stones. And ihou shalt there offer burnt-oflTerings thereon to the Lord thy God, and thou shalt offer peace-ofTerings, and shalt eat there, and rejoice before the Lord iny God. This moil n tain is on the other side Jordan, by "ic way where the sun goetb down, in the land of the C;ii:aan- ites, who dw'lt in tjio rhamnaign over against Gilgal, bei^ides the plains of Moreh. which are over aeainsl Bhechem THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 331 Naplous, which hath been the head seat of the Samaritan sect ever since Alexander expelled them out of Samaria for the death of Androniacl us. This place the Jews, in our Saviour's time, by way of reproach, called Sicliar; and therefore, we have it so named in St. John's Gospel.' It signifieth a drunken city; and the prophet Isaiah having called the Ephraimitey (whose dwelling was in those parts) Siccorim,* i. e. drunkards, they have this text on their side for the justifying of that name. Near this place was the field which Jacob bought of the children of Hamor,^ and gave unto Joseph his son a little before his death. Therein Joseph's bones were buried, when brought ip out of the land of Egypt;'' and within the same plot of ground was the well, called Jacob's well,^ at which our Saviour sat down, when he discoursed with he woman of Samaria. But, after all the contest that is made between the Samaritans and the Jews about Jiese two mountains,® Jerome is positive, that neither of them were the Gerizim and Ebal of the holy scriptures, but the two mountains so called in them, and on which the blessings and the cursings were proclaimed by the children of Israel, on their first passing over Jordan into the land of Canaan, were two small mountains or hills lying near Jericho, at a great distance from Shechem. And Epiphanius was of the same opinion with Jerome in this matter: and they having been both upon the place, may well be thought the best able to pass a true judgment about it. Their arguments for it are, Jst, That the scriptures place these two mountains over against that part of the River Jordan where the children of Israel passed into the land of Canaan, and near Gilgal; but Shechem is at a great distance from both; and, 2dly, That the mountains near Shechem, called Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal, are at too great a distance from each other for the people from either of them to hear either the blessings or the cursings which were pronounced from the other; but that it would be quite otherwise as to the hills near Jericho, which they conceive to be the hills by the names of Gerizim and Ebal meant in scripture. But that hill from which Jotham the son of Gideon made his speech to the Sheche mites being called Gerizim,' and that certainly lying just over them (for otliorwise they could not have heard him from thence,) this clearly makes against this opinion, and evidently prove the Mount Gerizim of the holy scriptures to be that very Mount Gerizim on which the temple of the Samaritans was built. The Jews accuse the Samaritans of two pieces of idolatry,* which they say were committed by them in this place. The first, that they there worshipped the image of a dove; and the other, that they paid- divine adoration to certain teraphim, or idol gods, there hid under that mountain. For the first charge, they took the handle from the idolatry of the Assyrians: for that people having worshipped one of their deities (Semiramis, saith Diodorus Siculus)" under the image of a dove, they reproached the Samaritans as worshippers of the like image, because descended from them; and perchance they were so while they worshipped their other gods with the God of Israel, but never afterward. And as to the second charge, it is true, Jacob having found out that Rachel had stolen her father's teraphim, or idol gods, took them from her, and buried them under the oak in Shechem,'" which they suppose to have been at the foot of the moun- tain Gerizim; and from hence, because the Samaritans worshipped in that mountain, the Jews suggest, that they worshipped there for the sake of these idols, and paid divine adoration unto them. But both these charges were ma- licious calumnies, falsely imputed to them: for, after the time that Manasseh brought the law of Moses among them, and instructed them in it, the Samari- tans became as zealous worshippers of the true God, and as great abhorrers of all manner of idolatry, as the most rigorous of the Jews themselves, and so con- tinue even to this day. 1 John IV .'). 2 Isa. xxviii. 1. 3 Gun. .\.\iii. 10. xlviii. 22. Jos'li. xxiv. 32. 4 J< XXIV. 32. 5 John iv. G. 6 Vi I -calijicri Aniinadversiimes in Ensebii Chron.siib Numcro 1G81. 7 Jiul^fi.s ix. 7. 8 Tahi.iitl in Tractatu Cholin. vide etiam Waltoni Prolngom. li. ad Biblia Polyfjlotta Loiid. b. 7. et Hot linger! Kxercilaliones Anti-Morinianos, s. 10, 17. 9 Lib. 2. p. GC. 7G. 10 Gen. xxxv. 2—4. 332 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF And with this last act of Nehemiah's reformation, and the expulsion of those refractory Jews that would not conform to it, not only the first period of Daniel's seventy weeks, but also the holy scriptures of the Old Testament, ending, I shall here also end this book; and proceed to relate what after followed from the beo-innins; of the next. BOOK VII. An. 408. Bar. JVothus 16.] — Thus far we have had the light of scripture to follow. Henceforth the books of the Maccabees, Philo-Judaeus, Josephus, and the Greek and Latin writers, are the only guides which we can have to lead us through the future series of this history, till we come to the times of the gospel of Jesus Christ. How long after this Nehemiah lived at Jerusalem is uncertain; it is most likely, that he continued in his government to the time of his death; but when that happened is no where said: only it may be observed, that at the ' time where he ends his book, he could not be much less than seventy years old. After him, there seems not to have been any more governors of Judea; but that this country, being added to the prefecture of Syria, was thenceforth wholly subjected to the governor of that province, and that under him the high-priest had the trust of regulating all affairs therein. While Darius was making war against the Egyptians and the Arabians, the Medes* revolted from him; but, being vanquished in battle, they were soon forced again to return to their former allegiance, and for the punishment of their rebellion, submit to a heavier yoke of subjection than they had on them before; as is always the case of revolting subjects when reduced again under the power against which they rebelled. An. 407. Dor. JVothus 17.] — And, the next year after, Darius seems to have had as good success against the Egyptians: for Amyrtajus being dead (per- chance slain in battle,) Herodotus tells us," his son Pausiris succeeded him in the kingdom, by the favour of the Persians; which argues that, before they granted him this, they had reduced Egypt again under them, otherwise Pausiris could not have been made king of it by their favour. Darius having thus settled his affairs in Media and Egypt,^ sent Cyrus his younger son to be commander-in-chief of all the provinces of Lesser 'Asia, giving him authority paramount over all the lieutenants and governors before Dlaced in them. He was a very young man to be intrusted with so large an authority: for having been born after his father's accession to the throne, he could not have been now above sixteen years "old. But, being the darling and best-beloved son of Parysatis, who had an absolute ascendant over the old king, her husband, she obtained this commission for him, with an intention, no doubt, to put him into a capacity of contending for the crown after his father's death; and this use he accordingly made of it, to the great damage and disturbance of the whole Persian empire, as will be hereafter related. On his receiving his commission, "* he had this chiefly given him in charge by his father, that he should help the Lacedemonians against the Athenians, con- trary to the wise measures hitherto observed by Tissaphernes, and the other go- vernors of the Persian provinces in those parts. For their practice hitherto had been, sometimes by helping the one side, and sometimes by helping the other, 60 to balance the matter between both parties, that each being kept up to be a match for the other, both might continue to harass and weaken each other by carrying on the war, and neither be at leisure to disturb the Persian empire. 1 Xenophon Ilollenio. lib. 1. Ileiodot. lib. 0. 2 Lib. 3. . 3 Xenoph. Flellen.lib. 1. Plutarchus in Arla.\crxe,Kt Lysandro. Ctesias. Justin, lib. 5. c. .I. DioJor. Sir. ib. VA. p. 368. 4 Xeiioph. ibid. Diodor. Sic. ibid. Thiicydides, lib. 2. Justin, ibid. Plutarchus in Lysandro THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 333 This order of the king's for a contrary practice soon discovered the weakness of his politics: for the Lacedemonians having, by the help which Cyrus gave them, according to his father's instructions, soon overpowered the Atlienians, and gained an absolute conquest over them, they were no sooner at leisure from this war, but they sent first Thimbro, and after him Dercihdas, and at last Agesilaus their king, to invade the Persian provinces in Asia; where they did the Persians a great deal of damage, and might at length have endangered the whole empire, but that the Persians by distributing vast sums of money among the Grecian cities, and the demagogues that governed them, found means to re- kindle the war again in Greece; which necessitated the Lacedemonians to re- call their forces for their own defence, just when they were going to march into the heart of that empire, and there strike at the very vitals of it. So dan- gerous a thing is it in n^ghbouring states to break the balance of power which is between them, so as to put any of them into a capacity of oppressing and overpowering the rest. And this instance also shows that it is no new thing for the managers of public affairs, to barter away their national interest for their private gain, and sell it for money, even to those whom they have most reason always'to hate, and always to be aware of. An. 405. Bar. J^othus 19.] — Cyrus, at Sardis,' having put to death two noble Persians, who were sons to a sister of Darius, for no other reason, but that they did not, on their meeting of him, wrap up their hands within their sleeves; as was used to be done among the Persians on their meeting of the king: Darius, on complaint made hereof by the parents of the slain, was grievously offended, not only for the death of his two nephews, but also for the presumption of his son in challenging to himself the honour which was due only to the king; and, therefore, not thinking it fit any longer to trust him with that government, re- called him to court, on pretence that he was sick, and therefore desired to see him. But, before Cyrus did put himself upon this journey," he ordered such large subsidies to Lysander, general of the Lacedemonians, as enabled him to pay his fleet, and strengthen it so far, as to put it in that condition, by virtue whereof he gained that memorable victory over the Athenians at the Goats' River in the Hellespont, whereby he absolutely overthrew the Athenian state. For, after this, they being no longer able to defend themselves, he took from them all their cities in Asia, and having besieged Athens itself, forced them to a surrender, on the very hard conditions of dismantling their city, and giving up their fleet; which did put an end to the Athenian power; and vested the government of Greece wholly in the Lacedemonians, after they and the Athe- nians had contended for it in a very bitter war full twenty-seven years. This was called the Peloponnesian war; and is made very famous by the excellent accounts which are written of it by Thucydides and Xenophon, two of the best historians Greece ever had, their writings having ennobled it in the same man- ner as Homer's did the war of Troy. About the time of the ending of this war died Darius Nothus, king of Per- sia,' after he had reigned nineteen years. Before his death Cyrus Avas come to him, and his mother Parysatis the queen, to whom he was the best beloved of all her children, not being content to have made his peace with his father, whom he had greatly offended by his mal-administration in his government, pressed hard upon the old king to have him declared the heir of his crown, upon the same pretence whereby Xerxes had obtained the preference Ijefore his elder brothers in the time of Darius Hystaspes, that is, that he was born after his father came to the crown, and the other before. But Darius refusing to comply with her herein, bequeathed to Cyrus only the government of those provinces which he had before, and left his crown to Arsaces his eldest son by tie same Parysatis, who, on his ascending the throne, took the name of Artax- 1 Xenophon Ilellonicoriim, lib. 2. 2 Plutarclius in liVsandro. Xenoph. Hellonic. lib. 2. Diod. Sic. lib. 13. 3 Plutarch, in Artaxerxe. Diodor. Sic. lib. 13. Justin, lib. 5. c. 8. 11. CleBiaa. 334 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF erxes, and is the same to whom the Greeks, for his extraordinary memoiy, gave the name of Mnemon, i. e. the rememberer. When his father lay dying, and he was attending on him at his bed-side, he desired to be instructed by him, by what art it was that he had so happily managed the government, and so long preserved himself in it, to the end that he, by following the same rule, might attain the same success; to which he had this memorable answer given him by the dying king,' "That it was by doing in all things that which was just both toward God and man:" a saying worthy to be written up in letters of gold in the palaces of princes, that, having it constantly in their view, they might be put in mind to order all their actions according to it. An. 404. Artax. 1.] — Cyrus," being discovered to have laid a plot for the mur- dering of Artaxerxes in the temple at Pasargada, when he was to come thither, according to the ancient custom, to be inaugurated king, was taken into custody for the treason, and ordered to be put to death for it. But his mother Parysatis was so importunate with Artaxerxes for the saving of his life, that at length, by her means, he obtained his pardon, and was sent again into Lesser Asia, unto the government left him by his father's will. But carrying thither with him his ambition, and also his resentments for the danger of his life which he was put into, he took such courses for the gratifying of these passions, which soon made his brother repent of his clemency toward him. As soon as Artaxerxes was settled in the throne,^ Statira his queen, who, for ner great beauty, was very much beloved by him, made use of her power with him to be revenged on Udiastes for the death of her brother'Teriteuchmes. The whole matter had its rise in the reign of Darius, and was a complication of adultery, incest, and murder, which caused great disturbances in the royal family, and ended very tragically upon all that were concerned in it. The fa- ther of Statira was Hidarnes, a noble Persian, governor of one of the principal provinces of the empire. Artaxerxes, the king's eldest son, then called Arsa- ces, falling in love with her, took her to wife, and Teriteuchmes, her brother, about the same time, married Hamestris, one of the daughters of Darius, and sister of Arsaccs; by reason of which marriage, on the death of his father, he succeeded him in his government. But having a sister named Roxana, of as great beauty as Statira, and excellently skilled in archery, and the throwing of the dart, he fell desperately in love with her, and, that he might with the greater freedom have the enjoyment of his lust upon her, he resolved to make away with Hamestris, and rebel against the king. Of which wicked designs Darius having notice, engaged Udiastes, a chief confidant of Teriteuchmes, by great rewards and greater promises, to endeavour to prevent both by cutting off Teri- teuchmes. This Udiastes, to earn the rewards, readily undertook, and, falling upon Teriteuchmes, slew him, and thereon had the government of his province conferred on him for his reward. Mithridates, the son of Udiastes, being one of Teriteuchmes' guard, and engaged much in friendship and affection to him, on the hearing of this fact of his father's, bitterly imprecated vengeance upon him for it, and, in abhorrence of what was done, seized the city Zaris, and there, declaring for the son of Teriteuchmes, rebelled against the king. But Darius having soon mastered this revolt, and shut up Mithridates within his fortress, got all the family of Hidarnes, excepting the son of Teriteuchmes, whom IMithridates protected, into his power, and delivered them into the hands of Parysatis, to execute her revenge upon them for the ill usage of her daughter; who having caused Roxana in the first place to be sawn in two, who was the chief cause of all the mischief, ordered all the rest to be put to death; only, at the earnest entreaty and importunate tears of Arsaces, she spared Statira hia beloved wife, contary to the sentiments of Darius, who told her, that she would afterward have reason to repent of it; and so accordingly it happened. Thuf 1 Athenteus, lib. 12. 2 Plularchus in Artaxerxe. Xenophon. de Expeilitione Cyu, lib. 1. Justin, lib. 5. c. U. Ctpsiae 3 Ctcsias. i ,, THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 335 this matter stood at the death of Darius: but Arsaces was no sooner settled on the throne, but Statira prevailed with him to have Udiastes delivered into her hands; whereon she commanded his tongue to be drawn out at his neck, and thus cruelly did put him to death in revenge for the part which he acted in the ruin of her family, and made Mithridates, his son, for the affection which he expressed to it, governor of the province in his stead. But Parysatis, bitterly resenting this fact, in revenge hereof, poisoned the son of Teriteuchmes, and not long after Statira herself, in the manner as will be hereafter related. This gives us instances of the bitterness of woman's revenge, and also of the exor- bitant liberties which such are apt to run into of doing all manner of wicked- ness, who, being put above all restraint of laws, have nothing but arbitrary wiil and pleasure to govern themselves by. Art. 103. Artax. 2.] — Cyrus, designing a war against his brother,' employed Clearchus, a Lacedemonian captain, to raise an army of Greeks for his service, which he listed with a pretence of making w^ar with the Thracians; but they being maintained by Cyrus's money, were kept on foot for the executing of those designs which he was forming against the king. Alcibiades the Atheni- an," finding aut the true end for which these levies were made, passed over into the province of Pharnabazus, with purpose to go to the Persian court, there to make known to Artaxerxes what was brewing against him. But those who were the partisans of the Lacedemonians at Athens, fearing the great genius of that man, did let them know, that their affairs could not long stand unless he were cut off; whereon they sent to Pharnabazus to have him put to death, and he accordingly executed what they desired; and in his death the Athenians lost the great hopes they had conceived of speedily again recovering by him their former state: for had he got to the Persian court, he would so far have merited the favour of Artaxerxes by the discovery which he intended to make unto him, as, no doubt, he would have gotten his assistance for the restoration of his coun- try, ajid, with that assistance, a person of his valour, and other great abilities, would have turned the scales, and again set the Athenians as high as ever, and brought the Lacedemonians as low as they had brought them; for the prevent- ing of which, the Lacedemonians took the course of having him cut off in the manner as I have mentioned. An. 402. Artax. 3.] — The cities that were under the government of Tissa- phernes revolting from him to Cyrus, this produced war between them;^ and Cyrus, under the pretence of arming against Tissaphernes, went more openly to work in getting forces together; and, to blind the matter the more, he wrote letters of heavy complaints to the king against Tissaphernes, and prayed in the humblest manner his favour and protection against him: by which Artaxerxes being deceived, thought all the preparations which he was making were against Tissaphernes only, and, not being at all displeased that they should be at vari- ance with each other, took no farther care of the matter, but permitted his bro- ther to go on still to raise more forces, till at length he had got an army on foot, sufficient to put his designs in execution, for the dethroning of him, and the setting up of himself in his stead. And since he had helped the Lacedemo- nians against the Athenians, and thereby put them into a capacity of gaining those victories over them, whereby they had made themselves masters of Greece, in confidence of the friendship which he had merited from them there- by, he communicated his designs unto them, and asked their assistance for thf accomplishing of them; which they readily granted, and ordered their fleet t( join that under Tamus, Cyrus's admiral, and obey such orders as that princ* should give them. But this they did without declaring any thing against Ar taxerxes, or pretending to know at all of the designs which Cyrus was carryin)» on against him. "With this caution they thought fit to act while the event oi 1 Pliitarchiis in Artaxcrxe. Xonoplion dc Kxpeditione Cyri, lib. ]. Diodor. Sic. lib. li 2 ri:it:irchus in Alcibiad<;. Diodor. Sic. ct XeuoiiUon, ibid. Corn. Nepos in Alcibiade. 3 Piuiarclius, Xenophu!! ct Dindor. ibid. ^, CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the war was uncertain, that, in case Artaxerxes gained the victor}^ they mignt not, by what they did in favour of his enemy, draw on them his resentments for it. An. 401. Artax. 4.] — At length Cyrus, having raised all those forces which he thought sufficient for his designs, and mustered them all together,' he marched with them directly against his brother. He was followed in this expedition by thirteen thousand Greeks, under thejcommand of Clearchus (which were the flower and main strength of his army,) and by a hundred thousand of other forces, raised from among the barbarians. Artaxerxes, having notice of this from Tissaphernes, who posted to the Persian court to give him information of it, prepared to meet him with a numerous army. Cyrus's greatest difficulty was to pass the Straits of Cilicia, where Siennesis, king of that country, was making ready to stop his progress; and would certainly have effected it, but that Tamus, and the Lacedemonians with their fleet, coming upon the coasts of that coun- try, diverted him to defend his own territories; for a small guard in those narrow passes might be sufficient to impede the march of the greatest army. But after Cyrus had by this means got through them, he then marched on without any farther difficulty or obstruction, till he came to the plains of Cunaxa, in the pro- vince of Babylon, where Artaxerxes meeting him with an army of nine hundred thousand men, it there came to a decisive battle between them; in which Cyrus, rashly venturing his person too far in the heat of the battle, was unfortunately slain, after his auxiliaiy Greeks had in a manner gotten the victory for him. This put those Greeks into a great distress; for they were now at a great distance from their own homes, in the heart of the Persian empire, and there surrounded with the numerous forces of a conquering army, and had no way to return again into Greece, but by breaking through them, and forcing their retreat through a vast tract of their enemies' country, which lay between them and -home. But their va- lour and resolutions mastered all these difficulties; for the next day after, having, on consultation together, resolved to attempt their return by the way of Paphlago- nia, they immediately set themselves on their march, and, in spite of all opposi- tions from a numerous army of Persians, which coasted them all the way, made a retreat of two thousand three hundred and twenty-five miles, all the way through provinces belonging to the enemy, and got safe to the Greciaxi cities on the Eux- ine Sea, which was the longest and most memorable retreat that Avas ever made through an enemy's country. Clearchus first commanded in it, but he having in the beginning of it been cut oft' by the treachery of Tissaphernes, it was af- terward conducted chiefly by Xenophon, to whose valour and wisdom it was principally owing that they at length got safely again into Greece. The same Xenophon having written a large account of this expedition, the preparations that were made for it, and the reti-eat of the Greeks from the place of battle after it was lost, and that book being still extant, and published in the English language, I need say no more, than refer the reader to it, for a fuller history of all this matter. Psammitichus,^ who was descended from the ancient Psammitichus that Avas king of Egypt some ages before, and of whom I have spoken in the first book of this history, reigned, over the Egyptians after Pausiris. To him fled Tamus, Cyrus's admiral; for, after the death of that prince, Tissaphernes being sent down into his former government, Avith an enlargement of poAver (as haA'ing, in reAvard of the great service Avhich he had done the king in the late war, the same command giA^en him in those parts that Cyrus had,) all the goA^ernors of those cities and districts, within the verge of his authority, Avho had espoused the interest of Cyrus, fearing the account which he might call them to for it, sent their agents to make their peace with him on the best terms they could. Only Tamus, Avho was the most powerful of them, took another course. He was, by birth, an Egyptian, of the city of Memphis, and, being a person of 1 Xenophnn de Expeditione Cyri. Diodor. Sic. iib. 14. Pliitarchns in Artaxerjte. C'lesias. Justin, hb. 5. c. 11. SDiodor. Sic. lib. 14. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 337 great valour, and of great skill in maritime affairs, he was first employed by Tis- saphernes in the Persian fleet, and afterward, under Cyrus, became chief com- mander of it, and also governor of lona; by which means having amassed great wealth, instead of courting the favour of Tissaphernes, or at all trusting to hi^ clemency, he put his wife, children, and servants, with all else that he had, on board his ships, and made his retreat into his own country, much con- fiding in the friendship of Psammitichus, which he had merited by many good offices that he had done him while he served the Persians. But the perfidious man, having no regard to former obligations, or the common laws either of hu- manity or hospitality, as soon as he had received an account of his arrivid, and of the great riches which he brought with him, for the sake of them, instead of receiving him as a friend, he fell upon him as an enemy; and, having slain him, with all his family and followers, made a prey of all that they had. Only Gaus, one of his sons, staying behind him in Asia, escaped this massacre, and afterward became admiral of the Persian fleet in the Cyprian war; all the rest were barbarously murdered for the sake of what they had. Such horrid wick- edness doth the greedy desire of gain too often prompt men to, when they give up their minds to it. But Providence, no doubt, suffered it not to go unpunished, though we have no account of it: this barbarous murder being the only act that history hath recorded of this prince. Statira being very troublesome to Parysatis her mother-in-law, in expressing her resentments and reproaches for the countenance which she gave unto Cyrus her younger son against King Artaxerxes, to be revenged for this and other grudges formerly conceived against her,' she caused her to be poisoned; which was effected by this stratagem: They supping both together, and a certain bird being served up at table, which was a great rarity among the Persians, it was divided between her and her daughter-in-law by a knife poisoned on one side only; that part which was cut off on the unpoisoned side of the knife was given to Parysatis; and she having eaten it, this encouraged Statira, without any sus- picion, to eat the othe-r part which was cut off on the poisoned side of the knife; and she died of it within a few hours after. The loss of this his much-beloved wife greatly afflicted Artaxerxes: and therefore afterward, full discovery having been made how it came to pass, he banished his mother to Babylon for it, and for some years after never saw her; but at length, time having mollified his grief and resentments, he permitted her again to return to court, and from that time she made it her chief business to humour him in every thing, right or wrong, and no more crossed him in any thing whatsoever it was that he had an incli- nation to do; and by this means she regained her interest with him, and held it to her death. She was a most crafty woman, and of great understanding and penetration in all affairs, and of as great wickedness, as what is above relatec' of her doth sufliciently show. An. 400. Artax. 5.] — Tissaphernes being settled in his government, and with that enlargement of power which I have mentioned," he began to set hard upon the Grecian cities in those parts; whereon they sent to the Lacedemonians to pray their protection against him; and they being now freed from that long war which they had with the Athenians, gladly laid hold of this occasion of again breaking with the Persians, and sent Thimbro into those parts with an army against them; which being strengthened by the conjunction of those forces to it which Xeno- phon brought back from Persia, and such others as were raised out of the Gre- cian cities which he came to protect, he took the field with it against Tissa- phernes, and wore out the time of his government in several military actions in that country, in which he had some few, but not any great successes. An. '•^'^^). Artax. (S.^^ — But he having kept very bad discipline in his anny,^ and permitted his soldiers to make great depredations on the allies, comjilaint was made hereof to the Lacedemonians; whereon they sent Dercyllidas to take 1 Ctesias. riiitarchtis in Artaxerxe. 2 Xenophon Hellenic, lib. 3. Diodor. Sic. lib. H 3 Xenophon ct Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. Vol. L— 43 338 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF charge of that war in his stead, who being an able general, as well as a mos . excellent engineer (which last he was more particularly famous for,) he ma- naged it with better order, and much better success; and Thimbro being called home to answer for what he was accused of, and convicted of it, was sent into banishment for the punishment of his crime. Dercyllidas, after he had entered on his charge,' finding that he was not strong enough to wage war with Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus both together, resolved to agree with the one of them, that thereby he might be the better enabled to encounter the other; and therefore, having, according to this scheme, made peace with Tissaphernes, he marched against Pharnabazus with all his forces, and took from him all iJ^olis, and dispossessed him of several cities be- jides in those parts; whereon Pharnabazus, fearing that he might mvade Phry- gia also, where was the chief seat of his government, was glad to make a truce with him, to be secured from his farther insults. About this time Conon," by the means of Ctesias, the Cnidian, who w^as chief physician to Artaxerxes, procured peace from that king for Euagoras of Salamine, in the island of Cyprus. This Euagoras having expelled Abdymon, the Citism, out of that city, where he was governor for the Persian king, set himself up in his stead, and reigned there as king of that place many years. Conon having been one of the generals of the Athenians at the battle of the Goats' River, as soon as he sriw all was there brought to a desperate point,* made his escape with nine of the Athenian ships; and, having sent one of them to Athens, to acquaint his citizens with the ill fate of the battle, fled with the rest to this Euagoras, with whom he had contracted a former friendship, and there continuing with him, made use of the interest which he had with the said Ctesias at the Persian court, to do his friend this good office. For Ctesias being chief physician to Artaxerxes (as I have already said,) was much in his favour, and had a great interest with him. He was at first physician to Cyrus his brother,* and followed him to the battle, in which he was slain; where, being taken prisoner, he was made use of to cure Artaxerxes of the wounds i^eceived by him in that battle; in which having well succeeded, he was retained as chief physician in ordinary to that king, and lived with him in that quahty seventeen years. While he resided at this court, having well in- formed himself in the histories of those countries, he wrote them in twenty- three books.* The six first of them contained an account of the empire of the Assyrians and Babylonians, from the time of Ninus and Semiramis to that of Cvrus;^ the other seventeen were of the affairs of Persia, from the beginning ot 'ne reign of Cyrus to the third year of the ninety-fifth Olympiad, which was coincident with the year before Christ 398, the very next immediately fol- low'ng after this of Vv^hich I now Avrite. For here Diodorus Siculus tells us it ended.'' Ajid he wrote also a history of India. Out of both these Photius hath witlen extracts; and these are all the remains which are extant of his writings. He often contradicts Herodotus,^ and in some things also differs from Xenophon. We find but a poor character of him among the ancients, they generally speak- ing of him as a fabulous writer;^ yet Diodorus Siculus and Trogus Pompeius take most of that from him which they have written of the Assyrian affairs: for he having professed,'" that all which he wrote was taken out of the royal re- cords of Persia, in which all transactions were, according to a law there ordain- ed for this purpose, faithfully registered, this imposed on many to give him more credit than he deserved. For that there were such royal records in Per- 1 Xfiiiophon Hellenic, lib. :). Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. 2 Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. Ctesias. Theoponipus in Excerptis Photii, N. 176. 3 Xpiinplion Hellenic, lib. 2. Dioiior. Sic. lib. 13. Plularchus in Lysandro. Cornelius Nepos in Conone. Isiicrates in Euagnr.i. 4 I'liiliirctius in Arlaxerxe. Diodor. Sic. lib. 2. p. 84. 5 Diodor. Sic. lib. ^i. p. ^4. Pliotius, Cod. 92. Suidas in KT>,(rix{. 6 Diodor. Sic. lib 3. p. SI. et lib. 14. p. 421. 7 Lib. 14. p. 421. 8 Photius, ibid. 9 Arisloteles in (list Aiiimalium, lib. ti. c. 28. Plutarch, in Artaxerxe. 10 Diodor. Sic. lib. 2. p. 84. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 3,39 sia, in which all the affairs and transactions of the government were faithfully entered, was a thing well known; and the books of Ezra and Esther give mb a testimony of them.' And his appealing to those records for the truth of what he wrote, was the readiest way he could take to gain authority thereto. While he lived in the Persian court, he was employed by the Grecians, as their com- mon solicitor, in most of their businesses which they had there depending; and in this quality Conon made use of him in the affair I have mentioned. This year the Athenians put Socrates to death for contemning their gods.* He wasthe father of the moral philosophy of the Greeks, and a very excellent person; but finding the theology of his''countrymen too gross for a wise man to follow, he endeavoured to reform it among his scholars; for which being ac- cused, as one that believed not in the gods that the city believed, and corrupted the youth, he was condemned to death for it, and accordingly executed, being then full seventy years old. But afterward the Athenians repenting of it, did put all to death that had a hand in the prosecution that was made against him. Dercyllidas, having made the truce with Pharnabazus that is above-mention- ed, marched into Bithynia,^ and there took up his winter quarters. While he was there, messengers came to him from Lacedemon, to let him know, that hia command was continued for another year; and by them he was also acquainted, that it had been desired by the Grecian cities in the Thracian Chersonesus, that the isthmus of that peninsula might be fortified with a wall, to secure them from the Thracian freebooters, who continually made inroads upon them, and laid their lands waste, so that they were discouraged from manuring them. ^n. 398. Artax. 7.] — And therefore having, the next spring, again made a truce with Pharnabazus,'' he marched with his army into the Chersonesus or peninsula above-mentioned, and there built the wall which was desired; within which he included eleven Grecian cities; whereby they being secured from aD farther ravages of the barbarians, thenceforth safely manured their lands, and in great plenty reaped the fruits of them. On his return into Ionia, after this work was finished, he found that a company of banditti, having fortified the city of Atarna against him, from thence made great depredations on the adjoin- ing countries; this necessitated him to sit down in a formal siege before it, which cost him eight months' time before he could reduce it. Pharnabazus, after this second truce with Dercyllidas,* made a journey to the Persian court, and there accused Tissaphernes to the king, for the peace w^hich he had made with Dercyllidas; blaming him, that whereas he ought to have oined with him, for the driving of those Grecians out of Asia, he had scandal- ously bought a peace of them, and thereby contributed to the maintaining of them there at the king's expense, and to the great damage of his affairs. This, no doubt, contributed much to the creating of that suspicion in the king of that great commander of his; which being afterward increased by other causes, at length made him resolve on his ruin. And at the same time consultation being had how the mischiefs which the king suffered from this invasion of .the Lace- demonians might be best remedied, Pharnabazus earnestly pressed him forth- with to equip a great fleet, and make Conon, the Athenian, then an exile in Cyprus, admiral of it, who was looked upon as the ablest commander of hi^ time for a sea war, telling him, that hereby he would make himself master f the seas, and that this would put him in a condition to obstruct the passages of all farther recruits from the Lacedemonians into Asia, which would soon put an end to their power in those parts. And Euagoras, the Cyprian, having at the same time%nade the same proposal, and offered his assistance in it, Artaxerxe was prevailed upon, by their concurrent advice, to resolve upon what thsy pro- 1 E/.ra iv. 15. Esther vi. 1. 2 Diogenes LaiTtiiis in Socrate. Plato irt Apologia pro Socrateet in PhEedone. Diodor. Sic. lib. 4. St'n ley's History of Philosophy, part 3. 3 Xenophon Hell. lib. 3. 4 Ibid. Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. 5 Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. p. 417. Justin, lib. 6. c. 1. Pausanias in Atticis. Isocratea in Euaeora etin \* L'-'nc ad Philippum. J40 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF posed; and therefore, having delivered to Phamabazus five hundred talents out of his treasury, he sent him with orders to get ready such a. fleet as he had ad- vised, and to make Conon the admiral of it. And accordingly Conon had hiu commission, and all hands were set to work on the coasts of Phoenicia, Syria, and Cilicia, to make ready the fleet that was to be put under his command. An. 397. Artax. 8.] — Dercyllidas, after he had reduced Atarna, and set a strong garrison therein,' marched into Caria, where Tissaphernes had the chief seat of his residence. For the Lacedemonians being made believe, that in case he were attacked there, he would, for the saving of that province, yield to all their demands, they sent special orders to Dercyllidas for the making of this expedition, wherein he had liked to have lost all his army; for Pharnabazus having joined Tissaphernes, they marched both after him with a great army, and soon had him at such an advantage, that, had they made use of it, and imme- diately fallen on him, they could not have failed of cutting him and all his forces to pieces. Pharnabazus was very earnest for making the assault; but Tis- saphernes, having experienced the extraordinary valour of the Grecian troops that followed Cyrus to the battle of Cunaxa, dreaded all Grecians in arms ever since, thinking all of that nation to be of the same valour and resolution with those which he had encountered with at that battle, and therefore could not be brought to hazard any conflict with them; but, instead of making use of the opportunity which he had in his hands, of absolutely destroying them, sent heralds to Dercyllidas, to invite him to a parley; in which proposals of peace having been offered on both sides, time was given for each to consult their prin- cipals, and in the interim a truce was agreed on between them. And thus Der- cyllidas escaped ruin only by the cowardice of his enemy, when there was nothing else that could have delivered him from it. An. 396. Artax. 9.] — One Herod,^ a Syracusian, being in Phcenicia, and see- ing a great many ships there anew building, and learning that a great many more were preparing on all the coasts of Phoenicia, Syria, and CiUcia, to make up a fleet of some extraordinary expedition, and supposing it could be only against the Greeks, he went on board the first ship he could meet with that was bound for Greece, and hastening to Lacedemon, informed the Lacedemonians of what was doing in those parts; at which news they being terrified and much confounded, as not knowing what course to take for the preventing of the mischief that was coming upon them, Lysander proposed to them the sending Agesilaus, who was one of their kings, into Asia, that, by making a strong assault there, he might divert the storm, wherever else it was in- tended. Which advice being approved of,' Agesilaus was accordingly sent with a great augmentation of forces into Asia, there to take upon him the command which Dercyllidas then had, and prosecute the war with the utmost vigour he could in those parts; and Lysander, with several others of the princi- pal Lacedemonians, to the number of thirty in all, were sent with him, to assist him with their counsel in this expedition. And this whole matter was despatched with that speed and secrecy, that Agesilaus arrived at Ephesus before any of the king's officers had the least intimation of it. So that there being no prepa- rations made to obstruct him, he took the field, as soon as he arrived, Avith ten thousand foot, and four thousand horse, and bore all before him wherever he went. Whereon Tissaphernes sending to him, to know for what end he came thither, Agesilaus answered, that it was to restore the Grecian cities in Asia to their liberty: hereon a parley being appointed to treat of this matter between them, Tissaphernes prayed a truce, till he should send to the king, and receive his instructions what to do herein. And accordingly a truce was agreed and sworn to on both sides. But Tissaphernes, having little regard to his oath, made no other use of this truce, than to send to the king for more forces; and to gain 1 Dioiloriis Sic. lib. 14. p. 417. Xenoplion HpUcii. lib. X 1 Xenophoii llelUtiiic. lib. 3. rUitnrcli. ct Corn. Ncpos in Aecsilao. 3 nutarchus in Agesilao ct Lysandro. I^orn. Nepos in Age.silao. Pausanias in Laconicis. Justin, lib. 6 c. £2. Xenophon, ibid. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 34^ a respite till they should arrive, was all that he intended by it. For as soon as those auxiliaries were joined him, he sent to Agesilaus, to denounce war against him, unless he immediately left the country; at which the Lacedemonians and confederates then present were very much concerned, as fearing that the forces of Tissaphernes, now augmented with his new auxiliaries, might be too much superior to be withstood by theirs, who scarce amounted to a fourth part of their number. But Agesilaus, not being at all moved or dismayed thereat, with a pleasant countenance bid the ambassadors, who came with the message, tell Tissaphernes, that he was very much beholden to him, in that, by his perjuiy, he had made the gods enemies to himself, and friends to the Grecians. And thereon immediately drawing all his forces together, he made a feint, as if he intended tb invade Caria; but as soon as he understood that he had thereby drawn all the Persian forces into that province, to defend it against him, he turned short, and marched dnectly into Phrygia, a province of the government of Pharnabazus, and where he had the chief seat of his residence. His coming thither being wholly unexpected, he found nothing there in a posture to resist him; and therefore overrun a great part of the province without any oppo- sition, till he came to Dascylium, the place of Pharnabazus's usual abode, where some of his horse meeting with a defeat, he marched back by the sea- coast into Ionia, carried with him vast spoils gotten in this expedition, and win- tered at Ephesus. ^^n. 395. Jirlax. 10.] — Nephereus succeeding Psammitichus in the kingdom of Egypt,' the Lacedemonians sent to him to solicit his aid in their war against *he Persians; who thereon presented him with one hundred galleys for their sea war, and six hundred thousand bushels of corn for the subsistence of their forces. At this time Pharax, admiral of the Lacedemonians, held the mastery of the seas, with a fleet of one hundred and twenty sail, who hearing at Rhodes, where he put in, that Conon was with forty ships at Caunus, a city of Caria, set sail thither and besieged him in that place. But an army of Persians coming to his succour, Pharax was forced to raise the siege with disadvantage, and re- turn again to Rhodes; whereon Conon, having augmented his fleet to the num- ber of eighty sail, took the seas, and sailed to Doric Chersonesus: but he had not long been there, before he was recalled by the Rhodians; for they, being weary of the Lacedemonians, for some disorders and insolences there committed, drove them thence, and sent for Conon to protect them, and received him with all his fleet into their harbour. While he was there, the ships, which were carrying Nephereus's gift of corn to the Lacedemonians, put in at Rhodes, not knowing of the change of the party which had been there lately made; whereon Conon having seized them all, plentifully furnished both his fleet, and also that city, with the freight they were loaded with. After this, he was reinforced with ninety other ships, which came to him from Phoenicia and Cilicia, whereby he was made much superior to the Lacedemonians, and strong enough to have effected all that was expected from him; but he was hindered by the mutiny of his soldiers, occasioned for their want of pay, which they, whom the king had intrusted with the care of this matter, fraudulently detained from them. In the interim,^ Agesilaus, coming out of his winter quarters, prepared to in- vade the Persians in the strongest part of the country which they were possessed of in those parts, and accordingly gave out his orders for his march toward Sardis. Tissaphernes, thinking that this was intended only to deceive him with another feint, like that of the last year, took it that now he really intend for Caria, because he had given out to ^o another way, and therefore marched into that province to defend it against him. But Agesilaus, now truly acting as he had given out, led his army in Lydia. Tissaphernes hereon recalled his forces from their former rout. But Caria being a very rugged country, and unfit for horse, he had gone thither only with his foot, leaving his horse behind upon 1 Diodor. Sic. lib. 34. jt. 4rt8. Justin, lib. 6. c.2. Orosius, lib. 3. 2 Xenophon Hellenic, lib. 3. Diodor. Sic. lib. 11 p. 439. Plucarcli. etCorn. Nepos in Agesilao. J42 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the bordf rs of that country; and therefore, on their marching back to the rehef of Lydia, the horse being much before the foot, Agesilaus took the advantage of falling upon ' the former, before the latter could come up to their assistance; and thereby having gotten a great victory over them, and taken the Persian camp, he became absolute master of the field; and, having thereon overrun all the country, brought back from thence vast spoils, with which he enriched both himself and all his army. The loss of this battle' very much incensed the king against Tissaphernes, and augmented the suspicion which he had before conceived of him, as if he had other designs than truly were for his master's interest: and Conon coming at this time to the Persian court, much heightened the king's displeasure, by farther accusations which he there brought against him. For the depriving (lie soldiers of their pay on board Conon's fleet disabling him from the doing the king any service, and he having often in vain wrote to the court of it," at length being encouraged thereto by Pharnabazus, and having a commission from him for this purpose, he went himself to the Persian court then at Babylon, and, by means of Tithraustes, captain of the guard, so represented the matter to the king, as procured full redress; and the blame of what had been hitherto done amiss in this matter resting on Tissaphernes, this completed his ruin. For the king forthwith sent Tithraustes into the maritime provinces of the Lower Asia,^ with orders to put Tissaphernes to death, and succeed him in his government; which he accordingly executed, and sent his head to the king; of which he made a very acceptable present to his mother, who could never pardon him for the assistance he gave the king against Cyrus her most beloved son. But this very consideration ought to have moved Artaxerxes not to have dealt thus with him, since to that assistance he owed both his life and his crown. But no merit can be sufficient to secure any one, either in his life or fortunes, where arbitrary will and pleasure reign without control, and princes are at a full loose to execute whatsoever their groundless suspicions, their extravagant humours, or their wild caprices, may prompt them to. As soon as Tissaphernes was cut off,'' Tithraustes sent to Agesilaus, that the king having inflicted due punishment upon him that was the cause of the war, he ought to be content with it, and return home, promising, on this condition, 0 grant full liberty to the Grecian cities in Asia to live according to their own .aATs, they paying their usual tribute to the king, which was all the Lacedemo- nians desired when they first began the war. But Agesilaus, thirsting after greater conquests, would not hearken hereto; but, to put off the matter, referred him to the magistrates of Lacedemon, telling him, he could do nothing herein without them. However, for the price of thirfy talents paid him by Tithraustes, the storm was diverted from his provinces, and Agesilaus ordered his army to prepare for a march into Phrygia. But, while he was making ready for this war,* a new commission came to him from Lacedemon, whereby he was made generalissimo, of their fleet, as well as of their armies, and had all their forces in Asia, bcrfh by sea and land, put under his command, that, by thus having the entire direction of the whole war, he might conduct it with a greater uniformity, for the good of the state. This drew him down to the sea-coast, to take care of the fleet; which, having put in good order, he made Pisander, his wife's brother, admiral of it, and sent it to sea under his command. And in this, it is certain, he was more influenced by private affection to his brother-in-law, or some other by-end of his own, than by that due regard which he ought to have had for the public good of the state: for although Pisander were a man of valour and great courage, yet he was, in other respects, no way adequate to that trust, as the event afterward sufficiently proved. 1 Diodor. ibid. Plutarch, in Artaxerxe et Agesilao. Xenoplion, ibid. 2 Cornelius Ncpos in Cononc. Justin, lib. ti. c. -i. Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. p. 438, 439. 3 Xenoph. Hellenic, lib. 3. Diodor. ibid. PolyiBnus Stratagem, lib. 7. Plutarchus in Artaxer.xe et "i-iesilao 4 Xenophon, ibid. Plutarchus in Agesilao. 5 Pausanias in Laconicis. Xenoph. et Plutarchus, ibid THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 343 Agesilaus, having thus settled the sea affairs,' pursued his designs of invading Phrygia; where, having taken several cities, and made great wastes and depreda- tions in the province, he passed on into Paphlagonia, being invited thither by Spithridates, a noble Persian, who had revolted from the king: where, having made a league with Cotys, the king of that country, and married the daughter of Spith- ridates to him, he returned into Phrygia, and taking the city of Dascylium, there wintered in the palace of Pharnabazus, and fed his army with the spoils which he there got from the circumjacent country. Tithraustes,'*' seeing that Agesilaus was for carrying on the war in Asia, to 'divert him from it, sent emmissaries into Greece with large sums of money, to corrupt the leading men in the chief cities, and thereby induce them to rekindle a war in Greece against the Lacedemonians, that so Agesilaus might be called home to defend his own country; which had that effect, that Thebes, Athens, Argus, and Corinth, with other cities of Greece, entering into a confederacy together, raised such a war against the Lacedemonians, as produced all that was intended by Tithraustes in his stratagem, as will by and by be related ia ts proper place. And the putting of the people of the same nation and interest together by the ears, hath elsewhere been found the most successful means to advance the interest of a neighbouring tyrant. And money will never fail of this effect, where there are minds corrupted with vice, luxury, and irreligion. to prepare men for it. ^n. 394. Jlrtax. IL] — In the beginning of the next spring, Agesilaus being ready to take the field, ^ a parley was procured between him and Pharnabazus; at which Pharnabazus having recited the great services which he had done the Lacedemonians in their war with the Athenians, and reproached them with the ill requital they had returned him for it, especially in the devastations which they made in his palace, park, gardens, and estate, at Dascylium, that were his own proper inheritance: and all this being truths which could not be denied, Agesilaus, and his Lacedemonian council that attended him at the conference, were so confounded at it, that they wanted an answer to excuse the ingratitude which they were charged with. However, to make him the best amends they could, they made him a solemn promise, that they would no more invade him, nor any provinces under his government, as long as there were any else against whom they might prosecute the war which they had with the Persian king: and then immediately withdrew out of those parts, and thereon formed a design of invading the upper provinces of Asia, and carrying the war into the very heart of the Persian empire. But while Agesilaus was projecting this expedition,* there came messengers to him from Lacedemon, to recall him thither. For the Persian money having procured a very strong confederacy of several of the Gre- cian states and cities against them, they needed him at home to defend his own country; and accordingly he made all the haste thither that he could, com- plaining, at his departure out of Asia, that the Persians had driven him thence by thirty thousand archers, meaning so many darics, which were pieces of gold that had the impression of an archer upon them. But so small a sum did not do this job; it cost the Persians much more; and they could not hkve bestowed their money better to their own advantage: for hereby they saved vastly greater expenses, which otherwise they must have been at in the war, had they not this way got rid of it. And there are instances of other crafty princes who, by following the same methods, have gained the same success, and, in the way of bribery and corruption, have done that by hundreds of pounds in the councils of their adversaries, which they could never bring to pass by millions in the open field. ^ 1 Plutarclius in Apesilao. Xennpli. Hellenic, lib. 4. 2 Piiiisauias in I.aconicis el Messenicis. Xeiioph. Hellenic, lib. n. Plutarclius in Agesilao et Artaxerxe. 3 Xnnoph. Hellenic, lib. 4. 4 PIntnrclins in Affesiiao et Artaxerxe. Xenoph. Hellenic. lib. 4. Cornelius Nepos in Agesilao. Diodor. Bic lib. 14. p. 441. Justin, lib. C.c. 4. 344 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Conon, on his return from the Persian court," having brought money enough with him to pay the soldiers and mariners- of his fleet all their arrears, and sup- ply it with every thing else that was wanting, took Pharnabazus on board with him, and forthwith set sail to seek the enemy; and finding their whole fleet riding near Cnidus, under the command of Pisander, he fell upon them, and ob- tained a complete victory, having slain Pisander himself in the fight, and taken fifty of his ships; which did put an end to the empire of the Lacedemonians in those parts, and was a prelude to their losing it every where else: for after this it continued to decline, till at length the overthrows which they received at Leuctra and Mantinea put an absolute period to it. But it is not my purpose* to treat of what was done in Greece any farther than as the affairs of Greece interfere with what is the main design of this history. After this victory," Conon and Pharnabaztis sailed round the isles and mari- time coasts of Asia, and took in most of the cities which the Lacedemonians had in those parts; only Sestus and Abydus, two cities in the mouth of the Helles- pont, being under the command of Dercyllidas, held out against them; whereon Pharnabazus assaulted them by land, and Conon by sea; but not succeeding in tlie attempt, Pharnabazus, on the approach of winter, returned home, and Conon was left to take care of the fleet, with orders to recruit and augment it with as many ships from the cities on the Hellespont, as he could get from them against the next spring. ^n. 393. Artax. 12.] — And Conon having, according to this commission gotten ready a strong fleet of ships by the time appointed,^ Pharnabazus went on board it, and sailing through the islands, landed on Melos, the farthest of them; and having taken in that island, as lying convenient for the invading of Laconia, the country of the Lacedemonians, they from thence made a descent upon its maritime coasts, and having ravaged them all over, loaded their fleet with the spoils which they there got. After this, Pharnabazus being on his re- turn home into his province, Conon obtained of him,^ to send him with eighty ships of the fleet, and fifty talents of money, to rebuild the walls of Athens, having made him to understand, that nothing could conduce more to the bring- ing down the pride of the Lacedemonians, than by this means to put Athens again in a condition to rival their power. And therefore, being arrived at Pi- raeus, the port of Athens, he immediately set about the work; and having gotten together a great number of w^orkmen, and made all that could be spared from on board the fleet, as well as the people of the city, to set to their helping hand, he rebuilt both the walls of Athens and the walls of the port, with the walls also called the long walls, leading from the former to the latter, and distributed the fifty talents which he had received from Pharnabazus among his citizens; whereby he restored that city again to its pristine state, and may on this account be reckoned as the second founder of it. The Lacedemonians, being exceedingly moved at the hearing of this, fortti- with despatched Antalcidas, a citizen of theirs, to Tiribazus, then governor foi the Persian king of Sardis, to propose terms of peace. And the confederates, on the other hand, on notice hereof, sent their ambassadors thither also, and among them Conon was one from the city of. Athens. The terms which An- talcidas proposed were,* that the king should have all the Grecian cities in Asia, and that all the rest, both in the isles and in Greece, should be restored to their liberty, and be governed by their own laws. Which being a peace that would be very advantageous to the king, and very disadvantageous and dishonourable to the Greeks in general, none of the other ambassadors would consent to it; and therefore they all returned without effecting |ny thing, excepting Conon. 1 Xenoph. Hellenic, lib. 4. .Tuslin. lib. C. c. 3. Cornelius Nepos in Conoiie. Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. p. 441. Iso- crate.«!in Eiiagora.et in Oratione ad I'liilippiiin. 2 Xenoph. Hellfnic. lib. 4. Diiidor. Sic. lib. 14. p. 441. 3 Xenoph. et Diodor. Sic. lib. 14. p. 441. 4 Cornel. Nepnsin Conone. Plutarch, in .Agesilao. Justin. lib. 6. c. 5. Isocrates in Euagora. Xenoph •! Diodor. ibid. I'aiisaniasiii Atticis. 5 Xenoph. Hellenic, lib. 4. Plutarch, in Agesilao THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ^ 345 For the Lacedemonians bearing an implacable spite to him for what he had done in the restoration of Athens, accused him of purloining the king's money for the carrying on of that work, and also of having designs for the taking of Molis ar 1 Ionia from the Persians, and subjecting them again to the Athenian state; wh ,ieon Tiribazus clapped him in chains,' and then, going to the Per- sian court to communicate to the king the proceedings of this treaty, he ac- quainted iMm also of the accusation which he had received against Conon: hereon Conon being ordered to be brought to Susa, was there put to death by the king's con^mand.^ j^?i. 392. Artax. 13.] — While Tiribazus was alttending the court,^ Struthas was sent down from thence to take care of the maritime coasts of Asia; where finding the great devastations which the Lacedemonians had made in those /erts, he conceived from hence such an aversion against them, as carried him wholly over to the Athenian side. Whereon the Lacedemonians sent Thym- bro into Asia again to renew the war there; but they not being able at that time to furnish him with strength sufficient for the undertaking, he was soon cut off by the superior power of the Persians, and all his fonces broken and dissipated. After him Dephridas came thither to gather up the remains of this army, and carry on the war; and after him others were sent with the same commission. But all their doings in Asia, after the battle of Cnidus, were only as the faint strugglings of a dying power; and therefore they were forced at length to give up all there, when they could no longer hold it, by a treaty of peace, which was very disadvantageous, as well as very dishonourable to aU that were of the Grecian name. Jin. 39L Artax. 14.] — And therefore Artaxerxes, being in a manner almost wholly eased of the Grecian war,"* turned his whole power against Euagoras, king of Cyprus, and began a war against him which he had long designed, but was not till now at leisure to prosecute it. HoWEuagoras seized Salimine, by expelling the Persian governor, and made himself king of that city, and pro- cured, by the means of Conon, to be confirmed herein by Artaxerxes, I have already given an account. But Euagoras, being a man every way qualified for great undertakings, in a little time so enlarged his strength and his power, that he made himself in a manner king of the whole island of Cyprus. The Ama- thusians, the Soliaris, and the Citians, were those only that held out against him; and Artaxerxes, becoming jealous of the growing power of this active and wise prince, first countenanced them herein, and afterward openly embraced their cause, and declared war against Euagoras; in which Isocrates tells us he expended above fifty thousand talents, which may be reckoned at ten millions of our money. An. 390. Artax. 15.] — The Athenians, notwithstanding the alliance they now- had with the Persians, and the benefits they had lately received from them,* would not deny their assistance to Euagoras, who had much befriended them, especially in the kind reception which those who fled with Conon from the bat- tle of the Goats' River had found with him; and perchance their resentments against the king, for the death of that gallant Athenian their restorer, did not a little move them to this resolution. And therefore they forthwith equipped ten ships of war, and sent them to the aid of Euagoras, under the command of Philocrates. But a fleet which the Lacedemonians had at sea, under the com- mand of Telautias, the brother of Agesilaus, falling in with them in the isle of Rhodes, took them all; whereby it came to pass, that those who were enemies to the King of Persia, destroyed those who were going from his friends to make ■ war against him. An. '^9fd. Artax. 10.] — Achor^s succeeding Psammitichus in the kingdom of Egypt, Euagoras drew him, and also the Barceans,* a people of Lybia, into con- 1 Xennpli. ibid. Diod. Sic. lib. H. p. 4'12. Cornel. Neposin Conone. 2 Cdriiel. Nopos. ibid. Isncratesin Panepyr-co. 3 Xenoph. ibid. Diodor. Sic. lib. M. p. 4i7. 4 Isdcraii'siii Kuaffora. Diodor.Sic. lib. 15. p. 458. 5 Xenoph HoUcn. lib. '^ ^ 6 Thcopnmpiis in Kxccrp'.is Photii. Diod. Sic. lib. 15. p. 459. Vol. I.— 44 346 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY Ot federacy with him against the Persians; and all of them engaged in conjunction together, to carry on the war with vigour against them. An. 3S8. Artax. 17.] — Philocrates having miscarried in his attempt of carry- ing succours to Euagoras, in manner as hath been related, the Athenians sent Chabrias into the same service with another fleet,' and a good number of land forces on board of it; who arriving safe in Cyprus, managed the war with that success, that he reduced the whole island under the power of Euagoras, before he aguin left it; which redounded much to the honour of his own conduct, and also to that of the Athenian arms. An 387. Artax. 18.] — The Lacedemonians finding themselves hardly pressed by the confederacy of the Grecian cities against them, became desirous of a peace with the Persian king,^ appointed Antalcidas again to treat with Tiribazus about it; and resolving to make it on such terms as should necessarily engage that potent monarch on their side, instructed their ambassador accordingly; and having made him admiral of their fleet, under that Wind sent him with it into Asia to transact this matter. On his arrival at Ephesus, having appointed Ni- colochus his Ueutenant to take care of the fleet, he went to Sardis, and there communicated to Tiribazus the commission on which he was sent. But Tiriba- zus having no powers to enter into such a treaty, instead of sending for orders about it from the Persian court, they both went thither, where, on their arrival, the matter was soon concluded. For Artaxerxes being at that time as much desirous of a peace as the Lacedemonians, that so he might be the better at leisure to prosecute the Cyprian war, which he had then his heart much set upon, greedily accepted of the proposal upon the scheme which Antalcidas of- fered. And accordingly peace was made thereupon. The terms of it were, that all the Grecian cities in Asia, with the islands of Clazomenae and Cyprus,* should be under the power of the Persian king; and that all the other cities of Greece, and the isles, as well small as great, should be free, and wholly left to be governed by their own laws, except the islands of Scirus, Lemnus, and Im- brus, which having been anciently subject to the Athenians, should still con- tinue so to be; and that Artaxerxes should join with the Lacedemonians, and all others that accepted- of this peace, to make all the rest of Greece submit thereto. Which peace, being ratified under the seal of King Artaxerxes, Tiri- bazus and Antalcidas returned with it, and caused it to be proclaimed in all the cities of Greece. Hereby the Grecian cities in Asia, finding themselves be- trayed by the Lacedemonians, were forced to submit; and scarce any other of the Grecian stales were pleased therewith, it being very disadvantageous to many of them, and dishonourable to all. The Athenians and Thebans, of all others, were the most dissatisfied with it. But not being able alone to cope with the Persians, now joined with the Lacedemonians their allies to see it exe- cuted, were forced for a while to acquiesce therein. And it was not long that the Lacedemonians themselves were well pleased with it; but at this time being pressed on the one hand by the Persians, and on the other hand by the confede- racy of the Grecian cities against them, and not being able to withstand both, they had no other way to extricate themselves from the ruin which seemed to threaten them, than by making this peace: for hereby they engaged the Per- sians into an alliance with them, and, by virtue thereof, made all the confede- rated cities of Greece desist from that war which they were preparing against them, and by this means they saved themselves from the present danger; but at the same time they betrayed the common interest of Greece, and also their own, as far as it was involved in it. And Antalcidas at last met with his ruin from it; for the Lacedemonians," after the blow they had received from the The- 1 Cornelius Nepos in Cliabria. Xcnnpli. Hellenic, lib. 5. . rv- j o- " Xenoph. Hellenic, lib. 5. Plutarchus in Agesilao et Arta.xerxe. Isocrates in Panathenaico. Diod. Sic 1H-. 14. p. 45'2, 453. Justin. lib. 6. c. 6. 3 The city of Claz.omena? then stood on an island, but afterward that island was joined to the continc" t »n the same manner as were the islands of Tyrus and Pharus. Strabo, lib. 1. p. 58. 4 Plutarchus in Artaxerxe. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 3,17 banfs at Leuctra, needing the assistance of the Persian power to support them, and being made believe that Antalcidas could do every thing at that court since the making of this peace, sent him thither to solicit for money to help to bear them up in that distress. But King Artaxerxes finding his interest no way con- cerned in this proposal, as it was in the former, rejected it with scorn and con- tempt. And therefore being sent away without success, either out of shame for being thus disappointed, or out of fear of the resentments of his fellow-citi- zens for his failing in this negotiation of what they expected from it, he fam- ished himself, and so put an end to his life. This peace Polybius," Trogus Pompeius," Diodorus Siculus,^ and Strabo,'' tell us, was made in the same year that Rome was taken by the Gauls. It was called, from the author of it, the peace of Antalcidas; but it was not with any honour, but rather with infamy, to his name, because of the prejudice and dishonour which it brought with it to all Greece. Jin. 386. Artax. 19.] — The Athenians, on their accepting of this peace, were forced to call home Chabrias out of Cyprus; and Artaxerxes,^ now freed of all trouble from the Greeks, bent his W'hole force against Euagoras, king of that island. For having drawn together an army of three hundred thousand men, and a fleet of three hundred sail, he made Gaus, the son of Tamus (who hath been before spoken of,) admiral of the fleet, and Orontes, one of his sons-in- law, general of the army, and Tiribazus generalissimo over both, and sent them to invade Cy])rus: and accordingly they landed this great army on that island, for the reducing of it. Euagoras being pressed Avith so great a power, strength- ened himself for the war the best he could, having drawn into confederacy with him the Egyptians, Lybians, Arabians, Tyrians, and other nations, who were then at enmity with the Persians; and with His money, of which he had amassed a vast treasure, he hired a great number of mercenaries out of all places wherever he could get them; which altogether made a very numerous army. And he also got together a considerable fleet of ships. These at first he sent out in parties to intercept the tenders and victuallers, which brought provisions to the Persian army from the continent; which in a few days reduced them to that distress, that the soldiers m.utinied and slew many of their officers and commanders for their want of bread. For the remedying of this, theii whole fleet was forced to set to sea to fetch provisions from Cilicia; whereby the army being plentifully supplied, an end was put to the mutiny. In the in- terim, Euagoras received a great supply of corn from Egypt, and fifty sail of ships, which, with others that he fitted up at home, making up his fleet to two hundred sail, he adventured with them to engage the whole naval force of the Persians, though in strength and number much superior to him. He had fought a part of the Persian array, and gained the victory, and being flushed with this and some other advantages which he had obtained at land, he was emboldened hereby to make this attempt upon them by sea. But here he had not the same success. In the first onset he had the advantage, and took and destroyed seve- ral of their ships. But Gaus at length having brought up his whole fleet into the fight, his valour and his conduct bore all before him, and drove Euagoras out of the seas, with the loss of the greatest part of his fleet. With the re- mainder he escaped to Salamine, where the Persians, after this victory, shut him up in a dose siege both by sea and land; and Tiribazus went to the Per- sian court with the news of this success, and having there obtained two thou- sand talents for the use of the army, he returned with them farther to carry on the war. During his absence, Euagoras, to relieve himself in the distress he was reduced to, got through the enemj-'s fleet in the night with ten ships, and sailed for Egypt, leaving Protagoras his son to manage all affairs in his absence. His end in this voyage w^as, to engage Achoris to join his whole power with him for the raising of this siege. An. 385. Artax. 20.] — But failing in the main of what he there expected, he 1 Lib. 1. 2 Justin, lib. 6. c. 6. 3 Lib. 4. 4 Lib. C. o Diodor. Sic. lib. J.'i. 348 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF was gent back only with some supplies of money/ which were far short of what he needed to relieve him in his present distress: and, therefore, being returned to Salamine, and got again into the place, by the favour of the night, in ihe same manner as he came out, and finding himself deserted by his allies, and destitute of all other helps for the raising of the siege, he sent to Tiribazus to treat of peace; but could be allowed no other terms than to be divested of all that he irad in Cyprus, excepting the city of Salamine only, and to hold that oi the king, as a servant of his lord, and to pay him tribute for it. However, con- sidering the necessity of his aifairs, he yielded to all this, excepting only the holding of Salamine as a servant under his lord; he desired it might be ac a king under a king. But Tiribazus not consenting to'this, the war went on. In the mean time Orontes, who commanded the land army, not brooking the su- periority which Tiribazus had over him, as being generalissimo, and having the chief conduct of the whole war, and envying also the success which he had in it, and the honour which he had gotten thereby, wrote secretly calumniating letters to the king, accusing him of having secret designs against the king's interest, and that for this purpose he held private correspondence with the Lacedemo- nians, and had causelessly procrastinated the war, and admitted a treaty with Euagoras, when it was in his power to have suppressed him by force, and, by courting the affection of the officers and commanders of the army, had engaged them all to him, for the promoting of his hidden purposes: whereon he was taken into custody by order from the king, and sent prisoner to the court, and Orontes had the chief command conferred on him; which was the thing he de- sired, as what he thought belonged to him, much rather than to the other, as being the king's son-in-law. But the army being very much dissatisfied with the change, things went very heavily on under his conduct; for all his orders, through this discontent of the soldiery, were very negligently executed, and the enemy recovered courage and strength hereby; so that at length Orontes was forced to renew the treaty with Euagoras, for which he had accused his prede- cessor, and concluded it upon terms which the other had refused: for he con- sented that he should hold Salamine of the king of Persia, as king of that city, yielding only tribute to him for it. So peace was made with Euagoras. But this did not put an end to the war in those parts: for Gaus taking ill the unjust usage of Tiribazus,* whose daughter he had married, and fearing that this af- finity might involve him also in the same prosecution, he entered into a con- federacy with the Egyptians and the Lacedemonians, and revolted from the king, and a great part, both of the fleet and army, joined with him herein. The Lacedemonians entered gladly into this confederacy, because of the dis- like which they now had of the peace of Antalcidas. For, by this time, dis- cerning all the disadvantages of it, especially the ill consequence which it had in alienating the affections of all the other Greeks from them, because of the dishonour, as well as the damages, which it brought with it to all of the Gre- cian name, they would, for the redeeming of this fault, and the recovery of the credit which they lost by it, have gladly laid hold of this opportunity of again renewing the war with the Persians. But Gaus, the next year after, when he had brought his 'matters in some measure to bear, being treacherously slain by some that were under him, and Tachos, who set himself up to carry on the same design, soon dying, the whole of it fell to nothing; and after this the Lace- demonians no more meddled with the Asian affairs. V?ft. 384. Jlrtax. 21.] — Artaxerxes, having thus finished the Cyprian war,'' led an army of three hundred thousand foot and ten thousand horse against the Ca- Jusians. But the country, by reason of its barrenness, not affording provisions tinough to feed so large an army, he had like to have lost them all for want tnereof, but that Tiribazus extricated him from this danger. He followed the king in this expedition, or rather was led with the court in it as a prisoner, being in great disgrace because of Orontes's accusation; and having received in- 1 Diodor.Sic. lib. 13. 2 Ibid. 3 Plutarchus in Artaxerxe. Diodor. Sic. lib. 15. p. 462. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 349 tormation, that whereas the Cadusians had two kings, they did not act in a tho- rough concert together, by reason of the jealousy and mistrust which they had of each other, but that each led and encamped his forces apart from the other, he proposed to Artaxerxes the bringing of them to submission by a treaty; and, having undertaken the management of it, he went to one of the kings, and sent his son to the other, and so ordered the matter, that making each of them be- lieve that the other was treating separately with the king, brought both sepa- rately to sublnit to him, and so saved him and all his army. These people' inhabited some part of the mountainous country which lies between the Euxine and the Caspian seas, to the north of Media, where they," having neither seed- time nor harvest, lived mostly upon apples and pears, and other such tree fruits; the land, by reason of its ruggedness and unfertility, not being capable of til- lage. And this was that which brought the Persians into such distress when they invaded them, the country not being capable of affording provisions for so great an army. Fuller hath a conceit,^ that these Cadusians were the descend- ants of the Israelites, of the ten tribes which the kings of Assyria carried cap- tive out of the land of Canaan; but his reason for it being only, that he thinks they were called Cadusians from the Hebrew word Kedushim, which signifieth holy people, this is not foundation enough to build such an assertion upon. It would have been a better argument for this purpose, had he urged for it, that the Colchians and neighbouring nations are said anciently to have used circum- cision;'' for not far from the Colchians was the country of the Cadusians. Artaxerxes lost a great number of men in this ill-projected expedition; among others who perished in it was Camissares, by nation a Carian, and a very gallant man. He was governor of Leuco-Syria, a province lying between Cilicia anj Cappadocia; and was, on his death, succeeded therein by Datames his son, wh: was also with Artaxerxes in this expedition, and did him great service in it, fo the reward of which he had his father's government conferred on him. Ht was for valour and miUtary skill the Hannibal of those times. Cornelius Nepoa hath given us his life at large; by which it appeors no man ever exceeded him in stratagems of war, or in the valour and activity by which he e:!iecuted them. But these eminent qualities raised that envy against him in the Persian court, as at last caused his ruin; as it hath been the fate of too many gallant men to have been thus undone by their own merit. On the king's return to Susa, the service which Tiribazus did him in this ex- pedition,^ procured him a fair hearing of his cause; and it having been tho- roughly examined before indifferent judges appointed by the king for it, he was found innocent and honourably discharged; and Orontes, his accuser, was con- demned of calumny, and with disgrace banished the court, and put out of the king's favour for it. Jl7i. 377. Artax. 28.] — Artaxerxes, being now free from all other wars, re- solved on the reducing of the Egyptians; they having freed themselves from the yoke of the Persians, and stood out in revolt against them now full thirty- six years; and accordingly he made great preparations for it." Achoris, fore- seeing the storm, provided against it the best he could, having armed not only his own subjects, but drawn also a great number of Greeks and other mercena- ries into his service, under the command of Chabrias the Athenian. Pharna- bazus, having the care of this war committed to his charge, sent ambassadors to Athens, to make complaint against Chabrias for engaging in this service against the king, threatening them with the loss of the king's friendship, unless he wcie forthwith recalled. At the same time he demanded Iphicrates, ano- ther Athenian, and the ablest general of his time, to be sent to him, and to take on him the command of the mercenary Greeks in the Persian arm;/ for this war. The Athenians, at that time much depending on the favour of the 1 Strabo, lib. 11. p. 507, 508. 510. 523, 524. 2 Plutarchus in Artaxerxe, 3 Misccll. lib 2. c. 5 4 Hcniilol. lib. 2. Diodor. Sic. lib. 1. 5 Dinilor. Sic. p. 463. (■> Ibid. lib. 15 p. 171. Corn. Nepos in Chabriu ct Iphicrate. 350 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Persian king, for the support of their affairs at home, amid the broils which they had with the other cities of Greece, readily complied with both these demands; for they iirmediately recalled Chabrias, setting him a day for his return, and at the same titne sent Iphicrates into the Persian army, to take on him the charge he was designed for. On his arrival, he having mustered his men, applied him- self to exercise them in all the arts of war; in which he made them so expert, that thenceforth, under the name of Iphicratesian soldiers, they became as fa- mous among the Greeks, as formerly the Fabian were among the "Romans, for the same reason. And they had time enough, before they entered on action, to grow up hereto, by the instruction that was given them. An. 376. Jlrtax. 29.] — For the Persians being very slow in their preparations, it was two years after ere the w^ar commenced. In the interim died Achoris, king of Egypt, and was succeeded by Psammuthis in that kingdom,' who reigned only one year. Jin. 375. Jlrtax. 30.] — After Psammuthis, reigned in Egypt Nepherites,* the last of the Mendesian race in that kingdom; for, after a reign of four months he was succeeded by Nectanabis, the first of the Sebennite race, who reigned twelve years. Artaxerxes, that he might the easier get Grecian auxiliaries for his Egyptian war, sent ambassadors into Greece to put an end to all war there; requiring that all the different states and cities in that country should live in peace with each other, upon the terms of the peace of Antalcidas; and that all garrisons being withdrawn, all should be left to enjoy their liberty, and be governed according to their own law^s. This proposal was readily accepted by all the cities of Greece, excepting the Thebans, w-ho, having then in view the gaining the em- pire over all, were the only Grecian people that refused to comply herewith. An. 374. Artax. 31.] — All things being now ready for the Egyptian war,^ the Persian army was all drawn together at Ace, afterward called Ptolemais, and now Aeon, in Palestine, and were there mustered to be two hundred thousand Persians, under the command of Pharnabazus, and twenty thousand Grecian mercenaries, under the command of Iphicrates; and their forces by sea were' proportionable hereto; for their fleet consisted of three hundred galleys, and two hundred ships, besides a vast number of victuallers and tenders, which followed to furnish both the fleet and army with all things necessary. At the same time the army marched by land, the fleet set also to sea, that so they might the bet- ter act in concert with each other, for the carrying on of the war. The first at- tempt which they made was upon Pelusium. Their design was to besiege it by sea and land; but the Persians having been long in preparing this war, gave Nectanabis time enough to provide for the defence of the place; which he did so effectually, that they could not come at it either by land or sea. And there- fore their fleet, instead of making a descent at this place, as was first intended, sailed from thence to the Mendesian mouth of the Nile; for that river then dis- charged itself into the Mediterranean by seven mouths (though now there are but two,'') each of which was guarded by a fortress and a garrison: but the Men- dusian mouth not being so well fortified against them as the Pelusian, because they were not here expected, they easily landed at this place, and as easily took the fortress which guarded it, destroying all those who were there set for its de- fence. After this action, Iphicrates advised that they should immediately have sailed up the Nile to jNIemphis, the capital of Egypt. And had they followed his advice before the Egyptians had recovered from the consternation which this powerful invasion, and the first success thereof, had put them into, they would have found the place wholly unprovided for its defence, and therefore must have certainly taken it, and with it all Egypt must again have fallen under theii powder. But the main of the army not being yet come up, Pharnabazus would not engage till he had gotten all his strength together, thinking that then his \ Eusob. in Chronico. Syticellus, p. 257. 2 Euseb in Chronico. 3 Diod. Sic. lib. 15. p. 478. Corn. Nepos in Ipliicrale. 4 That '.s, Daniiettn and IloB'jitH THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 351 power would be invincible, and he must necessarily carry all before him. But Iphicrates, rightly judging that by that time the opportunity would be lost, pressed hard for leave to attempt the place with the mercenaries only that were under his command. But Pharnabazus envying him the honour which would redound to him from hence, should he succeed in the enterprise, would not hearken to the proposal. In the interim, the Egyptians having gotten all their forces together, and put a sufficient guard into Memphis, with the rest took the field, and so harassed the Persians, that they kept them from making any farthei progress, till at length the Nile,' in its proper season, overflowing all the country, forced them to withdraw again into Phoenicia, with the loss of a great part of their army. And so this expedition, in which were expended such vast sums of treasure, and so much time in preparing for it, all miscarried and came to nothing. This produced great dissensions between the two generals; for Phar- nabazus, to excuse himself, laid the whole blame of this miscarriage upon Iphicrates; and Iphicrates, with much more reason, on Pharnabazus. But Iphi- crates being aware that Pharnabazus would be believed before him at the Per- sian court, and remembering the case of Conon, that he might not meet with the like fate, privately hired a ship, and got safely away to Athens. Hereon Pharnabazus sent ambassadors after him, to accuse him of making this expedi- tion into Egypt miscarry; to which the Athenians gave only this answer, — That if he were found guilty of this, they would punish him for it according to his de- merit. But it seems they were so far convinced of his innocency as to this mat- ter, that they never called him to a trial for it; and a little while after they made him sole admiral of their whole fleet. That which made most of the expeditions of the Persians under this empire miscarry, was their slowness in the execution of their designs. For the gene- rals having nothing left to their own discretion, but being in all things strictly tied up to orders, durst not proceed on any emergency without instructions from court; and usually before these could arrive, the opportunity was lost. And this was signally the case in this war. And therefore, Iphicrates perceiving Pharnabazus to be very quick in his resolves, and very slow in the execution of them, and having thereon asked him, how it came to pass that he was so forward in his words, and so backward in his actions,^ had the whole truth told him in this memorable answer, — That his words were his own, but his actions wholly depended on his master. And many like instances may be given wherein noble opportunities of acting great things for the good of the public have been wholly lost, by too straitly tying up the hands of those who are to execute them. "The same year that these things were done in Egypt,^ Euagoras king of Salamine, in the island of Cyprus, being murdered by one of his eunuchs, Ni- cocles his son reigned in his stead, and is the same for whose sake tAvo of Iso- crates' orations were composed, and they still bear the title of his name. In the first of these is proposed the duty of a king to his subjects; in the second the duty of subjects to their king; for which Nicocles gave him twenty talents,* i. e. three thousand seven hundred and fifty pounds of our money. Jin. 373. Jlrtax. 32.] — The next year aftcr,^ which was the thirty-second of Artaxerxes Mnemon, Joiada the high-priest of the Jews being dead," Johanan 1 The nafiirn of this rivnr i«, to be six months a risinji, and six months a fallinp; and when it is at th« hoieht, it rether fall in the upper parts of Ethiopia, where the rise of the Nile is. These rains beirin to fall in April, and continue till Octobi'r. and send great floods into the Nile, which b 'ginning to reach Egypt in the May following, do there cause Ibis rising or increase of the Nile, which from Ihence continues to rise higher and higher, till the be- ginning of October following, and then it again falls in the same grsilual manner as it rose, till the April following. 'I'lie months of the overflow are Auiust and September, and some part of October. It must rise sixteen cubits to make a fertile year; but sometimes it riseth to twenty-three. If it riscth no higher tban twelve or thirteen cubits, a famine followelh in that country. 2 Diodor. Sic. lib. 1.5. p. 478. 3 Aristoteles Politic, lib. 5. c. 10. Theopompiis in Bibliolheca Photii, N. J76. 4 Plutarch, in Vita Isocratis. 5 Chronicon. Alexandrin. 6 Nehem. zii. 23. xiii. Sft 352 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF his son, called also Jonathan,' succeeded him in his office, and held it thirty-two years. An. 371. Arfax. 31.] — Artaxerxes^ again sent ambassadors into Greece, tr exhort the states and cities, which were there at war with each other, to lay down their arms, and come to an accord upon the terms of the peace which he had made with Antalcidas. All expressed a readines to submit hereto, except the Thebans. That which made them at that time dissent was, that bv that peace it was provided, that all the cities of Greece should be left to enjoy their own liberties, and be governed according to their own laws. Upon this article, the Lacedemonians pressed the Thebans to set all the cities of Boeotia free, and to rebuild Platea and Thespia, two cities of that country, which they had de- molished, and restore them again to the former inhabitants, with the territories appertaining to them. And, on the other side, the Thebans, retorting upon the Lacedemonians the same argument, pressed them to permit all the towns of Laconia to enjoy their liberties, and restore Messena to its ancient owners: for they urged, that the articles of the peace insisted on did as much require the one as the other; and that therefore, if the Lacedemonians would not execute this article on their part, neither would they on theirs. But the Lacedemoni- ans not being sufficiently humbled by the loss of their fleet at Cnidus, would not understand this way of arguing, but, looking on themselves still as much superior to the Thebans, would have them submit to that which they would not do themselves; and therefore sent an army against them to force them to it, which produced the battle at Leuctra,^ in which the Lacedemonians were over- thrown, with the loss of Cleombrotus, one of thfeir kings, and above four thou- sand of their citizens; which was the greatest blow they had received in many ages past: for it brought the Thebans, in pursuit of this victory, into Laconia, which they wasted all over, even home to the city of Lacedemon itself, where they had not seen an enemy in five hundred years before; and it was with difficulty that they preserved this their capital from falling under the same devastation. An. 370. Artax. 35.] — The Lacedemonians being brought to this distress,^ sent Agesilaus into Egypt, and Antalcidas to the Persian court, to solicit for succours. But the Lacedemonians, since their overthrow at Leuctra, becoming contemptible to the Persians, Antalcidas had that iU success in his embassy, as caused him to put an end to his life, in the manner as hath been above related. An. 369. Artax. 36.] — However, this embassy prevailed so far with Artaxerxes, that Philiscus of Abydus^ was by his order, the next year after, sent into Greece, to endeavour the composing of the wars, which were there risen, and the bringing of all to peace upon the terms agreed on by Antalcidas. But the Lacedemo- nians refusing to consent that Massena should enjoy its liberties (to which it had been restored by the Thebans, in their late expedition into Peloponnesus, after the battle of Leuctra,) and the Thebans, refusing to come to peace on any other terms, this embassy ended without any effect; only Philiscus, thinking the Thebans stood upon too high terms, and being much offended thereat, sent to the assistance of the Lacedemonians two thousand mercenaries, which he had raised with the king's money, and so returned. An. 368. Artax. 37. — The truth of the case was, the Thebans being elevated with their late success, and much confiding in their two generals, Pelopidas and Epaminondas, (the latter of Avhich was one of the greatest men that ever Greece produced.) aimed now at nothing less than the empire of Greece. And, therefore, to strengthen themselves for the obtaining of it:" they sent Pelopidas and Ismenias, two of the most eminent of their citizens, in an embassy to King Artaxerxes, to secure him on their side. And on the hearing of this, the Athe- nians sent Timagoras and Leontes, and the other cities of Greece other ambas- sadors, to take care of their respective interests at that court on this occasion 1 Neliem. xii. 11. 2 niodor. Sic. lib. 15. p. 483. Xenoph. Hellenic, lib. 0. 3 Diodor. Sic. lib. 15 Xenopli. ibid. Plutarch, in Pelopida. Corn. Nepos in Epaminonda et Pnlopida. 4 Plutarch, in Agesilaoct Arta.vcrxo. 5 Xenoph. Hellenic. lib. 7. Diodor. Sic. lib. 15. p. 491. 0 Plutarch, in Pelopida et Artaxeric. Xenoph. Hellenic, lib. 7. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 353 At their admission to audience, they being required to adore the king, Isme- nias, on his entrance into the presence of the king, dropped his ring, and stoop- ing to take it up, thought by this trick to satisfy the ceremonial, and save his honour at the same time. But Timagoras the Athenian, to gain the greater fa- vour with Artaxerxes, directly, without any trick or subterfuge, paid him that ceremony of adoration which was required, for which he was put to death on his return,' the Athenians thinking the honour of their whole city sullied by this low act of submission in one of their citizens, though made to the greatest of kings, Pelopidas and Leontes would'not submit to the Persian ceremonial in this particular. However, they often had free access to the king, and Pelopidas,* by the fame of his great actions, as well as by his noble demeanour, at this court, got that ascendant above all the other ambassadors, both in the king's esteem and favour, that he obtained all that he desired in behalf of his citizens, and returned with full success Trom his embassy; for he brought back letters from the king under his seal royal, whereby it was required, that the Lacede- monians should let Messena be free, and that the Athenians should recali their fleet, and that all the other cities of Greece should have the full enjoyment of Iheir liberties; and war was threatened against all that should not comply here- •with. The success of this embassy was much to the satisfaction of the Thebans, ♦hey thinking hereby most certainly to gain the superiority over all the other cities and states of Greece. For, should the peace be accepted of on these terms, and the Messenians thoroughly restored, the Lacedemonians would lose one half of their territory, and thereby would be brought too Low to be any more a match for them; and should the other cities of Greece as well small as great, be all set at liberty, and made distinct states, free and independent of each other, this w^ould so divide their power, that none of them would be in a condition to contend with them, but all must submit to them. And if the peace were not accepted of, then the king being engaged in this case to join with \hem to force all to it, they thought, by this addition of strength, they should easily overjiower all, and thereby gain to themselves the same empire over the rest of Greece, as first the Athenians, and afterwai'd the Lacedemonians, had for some time enjoyed. But they failed of their expectations in both these parti- culars: for the cities of Greece, when met together by their delegates to hear the contents of the king's letters, all refused to swear to the peace on those terms; and Artaxerxes, not being at leisure to execute the other part of the treaty, did not, on this refusal of the Grecian cities to come into his measures, proceed to make that war upon them which he threatened; and so this whole embassy came to nothing, and the Thebans failed of all that they designed by it. For, Jin. 366. Jlrtax. 39.] — All that Araxerxes did hereupon was to send another embassy into Greece," about two 5'ears after; whereby, although he could not draw all the cities to subscribe to his terms, and swear to the peace upon them, yet he prevailed so far, that all laid down their arms, and submitted to be at quiet with each other on the scheme proposed. About this time a wicked fact of Johanan,^ the high-priest of the Jews, brought a great oppression upon the temple at Jerusalem. For Jcshua his bro- ther having much insinuated himself into the favour of Bagoses, then governor of Syria and Phoenicia for the Persian king, obtained of him a grant of the high- priesthood, with which Johanan had been invested several years, and came with this grant to Jerusalem, to take possession of the office, and depose his biother from it. But Johanan not submitting hereto, the matter came to a great contention between them; and while the one endeavoured by force to enter on the execution of the office, and the other by force to keep him from it, it hap- pened that Johanan slew Jeshua in the inner court of the temple; which was a very wicked act in itself, but aggravated and rendered much more so by the great profanation which was brought hereby on the holy place where it was I Valerius Maximiis, lib. 5. c. 3. 2 riulnrcli. in Pelnpida. Xenopli. Ilellpiiic lib. 7. i Pidfliir. Sic. lib.lo. p. 407. 4 Joseph. .Antiq. lib. 11. c. 7. Vol. L— 15 354 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF committed. Bagoses hearing of this, came in great wrath to Jerusalem, to take an account of the fact; and when, on his going into the temple to see the place where it was p-rpetrated, they would have hindered his entrance (all Gentiles being reckoned uy them as impure, and prohibited to enter thither.) he cried out with great indignation, — "What! am I not more pure than the dead car- cass of him whom ye have slain in the temple?" Whereon, entering without any farther opposition, and having taken a thorough cognizance of the fact, he imposed a mulct on the temple for the punishment of it. obliging the priests to pay out of the public treasury, for every lamb they offered in the daily sacri- fice the sum of fifty drachms, which is about 1/. 11,?. 3d. of our money. This, if extended only to the ordinary sacrifices which were offered every day, amounted to thirty-six thousand five hundred drachms for the whole year, which is no more than 1140/. 12*. 6d. of our money. But, if it extended also to the extraordinary sacrifices, which were added to the ordinary on solemn days, it will come to about half as much more; for the ordinary sacrifices which were offered every day, and called the daily sacrifices, were a lamb in the morning,' which was called the morning sacrifice, and a lamb in the evening, which was called the evening sacrifice: and these in the whole year came to seven hun- dred and thirty. But besides these, there were added on every sabbath two lambs more;^ on every new moon seven;' on each of the seven days of the paschal solemnity seven,'' besides one more on the second day,* when the wave- sheaf was offered; on the day of Pentecost" sixteen; on the feast of trumpets seven;^ on the great day of expiation seven;*" on each of the seven days of the feast of tabernacles, fourteen;^ and on the eighth day, seven.'" So that the additional lambs being three hundred and seventy-one, these,' if reckoned to the other, make the whole number annually offered at the morning and evening sacrifices to be eleven hundred and one. And therefore, if the mulct of fifty drachms a lamb was paid for them all, it would make the whole of it to amount to fifty-five thousand and fifty drachms, which is of our money 1720/. 6*. 3d. But this sum being too small for a national mulct, and far short of what govern- ors of provinces on such occasions are apt to exact from their provincials, it seems probable, that all lambs that were offered in the temple, in any sacrifice whatsoever, were taken into the reckoning; and, without this, there will be no sufficient cause for that complaint which Josephus makes hereof; for he speaks of it as such a calamity and grievance upon the Jews, which a payment of 1720/. a year upon the whole nation of them could not amount to. Capellus reckons this mulct at sixty talents." This proceeds from his laying it at five hundred drachms a lamb instead of fifty; which is a plain mistake of his: for the text of Josephus, in all copies, hath ^-vT^xcrx^jfy, and not 7revr=c>,oo->:^; Jive hun- dred. But whatever this mulct was, the payment of it lasted no longer than seven years. For, on the death of Artaxerxes, the changes and revolutions which then happened in the empire, having made a change of the governor in Syria, he that succeeded Bagoses in that province no farther exacted it. Jin. 363. Artax. 42.] — A new war having broke out in Greece between the Arcadians and the Elians, and that having produced another amOng the Arca- dians themselves, '° one party called in the Thebans to their assistance, and the other the Lacedemonians and the Athenians. Hereon the Lacedemonians set forth a great army, under the command of Agesilaus, to help that party which they favoured, and the Thebans another under the command of Epaminondas to support the other party; which produced the famous battle of Mantinea, wherein the Lacedemonians lost the victory, and the Thebans their general Epaminondas, which was the greatest loss of the two; for with him all the vigour of the Theban state expired, and they never more signified any thing I Exod. xxi.v. 38. Numb, xxviii. 3—8. 2 Niinib. xxviii.9, 10. 3 Ibid. xx\iii. 11. 4 Ibid, xxviii. 16— 24. .5 Levi, xxiii. 12. 6 Ibid, xxiii. 17, 18. Niimb. xxviii. 27. 7 Numb. xxix. 2. 8 Ibid. xxix. R. 9 Ibid. xxix. 12—34. 10 Ibid. xxix. 36. II Histori.i Sacra et Exotica sub A. M. 3030. 12 Plutarchus in Agesilao. Diodor. Sic. lib. 15. p. Si, 1, 502. Cornel. Nepos in.^paininonda. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 355 after this. But as they had attained all their power and glory by the conduct and valour of this one great man, so they lost it all again with him. These losses being received on both sides, made both weary of the war, and therefore, soon after this battle, both parties, and with them all the rest of the Grecian states, came to a general peace among themselves; an A the Messenians, not- withstanding what the Lacedemonians endeavoured to the contrary, were also included in it, according as had been decreed by the king of Persia. While these things were doing in Greece, Tachos succeeded Nectanebis inf the kingdom of Egypt,' and gathered together all the strength he could, to de- • fend himself in it against the king of Persia, who still pursued his designs of recovering that kingdom again to his empire, notwithstanding he had so often miscarried in thern. An. 362. Jlrtnx. 43.] — And, to make himself the stronger against so potent an enemy, he sent into Greece to raise mercenaries, and prevailed with the Lacedemonians,* to aid him with a good number of their forces under the com- mand of Agesilaus, for the Lacedemonians, being angry that Artaxerxes had forced him to include the Messenians in the late peace, were glad to lay hold of this occasion to express their resentments for it. And Agesilaus, either out of fondness still to be at the head of armies, or else out of a greedy desire of gaining riches by it, gladly accepted of the employment, though it neither suited his age (which was above eighty,) to be engaged in such an undertaking, nor the dignity of his person thus to become a mercenary, and let himself to hire to a barbarous king. That Avhich chiefly tempted him to it was, Tachos promised him to make him generalissimo of all his forces: but when he was landed in Egypt, and, instead of a great and glorious king, which his great ac- tions had represented him to be, the Egyptians found him a little old man, ill clothed, and of a contemptible presence, and living without pomp and cere- mon}', they very much despised him; and Tachos would allow him no other command but that of his mercenaries at land, committing to Chabrias the Athe- nian the charge of his fleet, and reserving to himself the chief command over all. And, when he had joined the Grecian mercenaries to the rest of his army, he marched with his whole strength into Phcenicia, thinking it better to meet the war there, than to expect till it should be brought home to him to his own doors; and Agesilaus was forced to attend him thither. But the old Gre- cian king saw the ill consequence of this retolution, and advised him against it, telling him, that, in the present unsettled state of his kingdom, it was his in- terest to tarry in Egypt, and look well to his affairs there, and manage the war abroad by his lieutenants. But Tachos contemning his advice in this particu-- lar, and slighting him in most things else, this so far alienated Agesilaus from him, that when, in his absence in Phoenicia, the Egyptians revolted from him, and set up Nectanebus his kinsman in his stead, Agesilaus joined with the re- volters, and drove Tachos out of his kingdom; who thereon fled to Sidon, and from thence went to the Persian court. Plutarch condemns Agesilaus as guilty of treachery, in thus turning his arms against the person into whose service he was hired. Agesilaus's excuse for it was, that he was sent to aid the Egyptians, and that therefore the Egyptians having armed against Tachos, he could not fight against them, unless he had new instructions from Lacedemon; whereon messengers being sent thither, the orders returned by them were, that Agesi- laus should act herein according to what he judged would be best for the inter- est of his country; whereon Agesilaus going over to Nectanebus, Tachos v/ay forced to make his flight out of Eg3'pt in the manner as hath been related. An. 361. Jlriax. 44.] — And he was no sooner gone,^ but another from amoiig the Mendesians did set up in his stead, against Nectanebus, and got together an army of one hundred thousand men to support his pretensions. Agesilaus's advice to Nectanebus was, that he should fall on them immediately, before they 1 Cornel. Nfipos et Plutarchus in Agesilao. Diodor. Bic. lib. ]5. p. 504. a Plutarch. Cornel. Nepos, et Diodor. ibid. 3 Plutarch, in Agesilno. Diod. Sic. lik. IS. 356 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF were well formed and disciplined; and they being most of them raw and unex- (>enenced men, they might easily have been dissipated and broken, had this advice been followed. But Nectanebus mistrusting it to be given with an ill flesign, and growing jealous that Agesilaus intended to betray him, as he had Tachos before, would not hearken to him, but delayed the matter to gain more strength. In the interim his adversary having brought his army into form and order, grew too strong for him; whereon he was forced to coop himself up, with all his forces, in one of his towns; and the other sat down before it to besiege him therein, and began to draw lines of circumvallation about it. Nectanebus, seeing the danger, would then have had Agesilaus engage the enemy to.extri- cate him out of it. This he refused for some time to do; which increased the jealousy of that prince against him. But when the lines were so far drawn round as only to leave a sufficient space for the besieged to draw up their army ■in it, then Agesilaus told Nectanebus, that this was his only time to fall on; that the lines which the enemy had drawn, secured him from being encompassed; ■and that the gap, which was still left void, allowed room enough for him to ^)ring all his forces to the battle; whereon an engagement ensuing, the besiegers tirere put to the rout, and after this Agesilaus managed the rest of the war with that success, that he every where vanquished the other king, and at length took him prisoner. And thereon, having settled Nectanebus in full and quiet pos- session of the kingdom, returned homeward in the ensuing winter; but being in his way driven by contrary winds on the African shore, at a place called the haven of Menelaus, he there sickened and died, being full eighty-four years old. Jin. 360. Artax. 45.] — Toward the latter end of the reign of Artaxerxes, great disturbances grew in the Persian court; which were occasioned by the contention of his sons," in making parties among the nobility about the succes- sion. For he had one hundred and fifteen sons by his concubines, and three by his queen; the names of the latter were Darius, Ariaspes, and Ochus. Foi the stilling of these commotions, Artaxerxes declared Darius the eldest of them to be his successor; and for the firmer settling of the matter, allowed him to assume the name of king, and wear the royal tiara even in his life-time.^ But iliis not contenting him, and there being also some disgust about one of the king's concubines which he would have had from him, he formed a design against his father's life, and drew fifty of his brothers into the same conspiracy with him. He was chiefly excited to this by Tiribazus, whose name hath been often above mentioned. Artaxerxes had promised him one of his daughters; but falling in love with her, he had married her himself, and, to make him amends, having promised him another of his daughters, he married this also: such abominable incest was in those times allowed in Persia, by the religion which they then professed. These two disappointments greatly discontenting Tiribazus, and provoking his resentments against the king for them, to be re- venged of him, he excited the young king to this flagitious act. But the whole being discovered, Darius was cut off in such manner as he deserv^ed,'and all his "accomplices with him. An. 359. Artax. 46.] — After the death of Darius,^ the same contention was again revived which was in the Persian court before his being declared king; three of his surviving brother^ in the same manner m.aking parties for the suc- cession. These were Ariaspes, Ochus, and Arsames: the two former being the king's sons by his queen, claimed as the lawful heirs; but the other only by the favour of his father, to whom he was the most beloved of the three, though born to him only by one of his concubines. But the restless ambition of Ochus prompting him to all manner of Avays to obtain the crown, he carried it from the other two by the wickedest and the worst of means. For Ariaspes being an easy and credulous prince, he terrified him so by menaces, which he su- 1 Plutarch, in Arlaxerxfi. ClcMas. Justin. lib. 10. c. 1,2. 2 Thi. 1 Thisbeini; a petty prince, was subject to the king of Persi.i. and reigned under his prt 'ctin. "ind 't < Ibre was obliged to obey his orders. 2 Vide Isocratem in Nicocle et Euagora, et Usserii Annnipq ._. n. M. 3C30. et 3654. 3 Diodor. Sic. lib. 16. p. 532. -i Ibid.p. 531. &:c. 5 Ibi ' SS" THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 36| from th; Grecian cities of Asia, and all these joined him immediately alter his taking of Sidon. The Jews seem to have been engaged in this war of the Phcenicians against Ochus: for, after he had taken Sidon,' he marched into Judea, and besieged and took Jericho, and, making many of the Jews captives, he led part of them with him into Egypt, and sent a great number of others into Hyrcania, and there planted them on those parts of that country which lay on the Caspian Sea. Ochus at the same time also got rid of the Cyprian war: for having his mind wholly bent on the reducing of Egypt, that he might not be diverted from it by any other embarrassment,' he was content to come to a composition with the nine Cyprian kings; and therefore, having removed their grievances, they all again submitted to him, and were confirmed by him in the government of their respective territories. The greatest difficulty in the bringing of this matter to a composure, was to content Euagoras, Avho claimed to be restored to his king- dom of Salamine; but he being convicted before Ochus of great crimes there committed, for which he was justly ejected, Protagoras was continued at Sala- mine, and amends were made Euagoras, by conferring on him the government of another place. But, having there run into the same misdemeanors which he had been guilty of at Salamine, he was ejected thence also; whereon being forced to flee into Cyprus, he was there taken, and put to death for them. An. 350. Ochus 9.] — Cj'prus, as well as Phoenicia, being thus wholly reduced, and settled again in peace, ^ Ochus set forward for this Egyptian expedition. In his way he lost many of his men at the lake of Serbonis. This lake lay in the entrance into Egypt from Phcenicia, of the extent of about thirty miles in length. The south wind blowing the sand of the desert upon it, made a crust upon the surface of the water, that in appearance looked like firm land; but if any went upon it, they were soon swallowed up and lost. And thus it hap- pened to as many of Ochus's men as for want of good guides marched on upon it. And there are instances of whole armies which have been thus lost in that place. On his arrival in Egypt, he planted his camp near Pelusium, and from thence sent out three detachments to invade the country, setting a Grecian and a Persian in joint commission over each of them. Over the first he put La- chares the Theban, and Rosaces governor of Lydia and lona; over the second Nicostratus the Argive, and Aristazanes; and over the third Mentor the Rho- dian, and Bagoas one of his eunuchs; to each of which having given his orders, he retained the m.ain of the army about himself, in the place where he had first encamped, there to watch the events of the Avar, and to be ready from thence to relieve all the distresses and prosecute all the advantages of it. In the interim, Nectanebus having sufficient notice from these preparations against him, to provide for his defence, had gotten together an army of one hundred thousand men, of which twenty thousand were mercenaries out of Greece, and twenty thousand out of Lybia, and the rest Egyptians. With some of these he garrisoned his towns on the borders, and with the rest guarded those passes through which the enemy was to enter into the country. The first of Ochus's detachments, under the command of Lachares, sat down before Pelusium, which was garrisoned with five thousand Greeks. While this siege was carrying on, Ni- costratus, having put his detachment on board a squadron of the Persian fleet of eighty ships that attended him, sailed up, through one of the channels of the Nile, into the heart of the country, and, having there landed his forces, strongly encamped them in a place convenient for it. Whereon all the soldiers of the neighbouring garrisons taking the alarm, gathered together under the command of Clinius, a Grecian of the island of Cos, to drive him thence. This produced a fierce battle between them, in which Clinius, with about five thousand of his men, being slain, and all the rest dissipated and broken, this in 1 Solinup, c. 25. Syncellus ex Africano, p. 25C Orosius, lib. 31. c. 7. Joseph, e.x nccatiro, lib. 1. contri Apionem. Eiisob in Chron. 3 Diodor. Sic. lib. IG. p. 534. 3 Ibid. p. .534, 535. Vol. I.— 46 362 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF a manner determined the whole fate of the war. For hereon Nectanebus, fear- ino^ lest Nicostratus should sail up the river with his victorious force, and take Memphis the metropoHs of his Idngdom, he hastened thither for its defence, leavino- those passes into his country open, which it was his chief interest to have defended. When the Grecians who garrisoned Pelusium heard of this re- treat, they gave all for lost, and therefore, coming to a parle}^ with Lachares, ao-reed upon terms of being safely conveyed into Greece, with all that belonged to them, to yield the town to him. And Mentor, with the third detachment, findino" the passes deserted and left open, marched through them, and without any opposition, took in all that part of the country. For having given it out throuo-h all his camp, that Ochus had given orders graciously to receive such as should yield unto him, but utterly to destroy all those that should stand out, in the same manner as he had destroyed the Sidonians, he permitted all his cap- tives to escape, that they might carry the report of it all over the country; who accordingly returning to their respective cities, and dispersing every where what they had heard was ordered by Ochus, and the brutal cruelty of the man making it believed, this so frighted the garrisons through all the country, that, in every city, both Greeks and Egyptians were at strife which of them should first yield to the invader: which Nectanebus perceiving, despaired of any longer being able to defend himself; and therefore gathering together all the treasure he could get into his hands, fled with it into Ethiopia, and never again returned. And this Avas the last Egyptian that ever reigned in this country, it having been ever since enslaved to strangers, according to the prophecy of Ezekiel,' which hath been already taken notice of. Ochus having thus made an absolute conquest of Egvpt, he dismantled their chief cities, and plundered their temples, and then returned in triumph to Babylon, loaded with vast treasures of gold and sil- ver, and other spoils gotten in this war, leaving Pheiendates, one of his nobles, governor of the country. And here Manetho" endeth his commentaries which he wrote of the Egyptian affairs. He was a priest of Heliopolis in Egypt, and wrote in the Greek language a history of all the several dynasties of Egypt,' from the beginning of that kingdom to this time, which is often quoted by Jo- sephus, Eusebius, Plutarch, Porphyry, and others, an epitome whereof is pre- served in Syncellus. He lived in the time of Ptolemy Philadelphus, king of Egypt; for to him he dedicates his book. The chief cause of Nectanebus's losing of his kingdom was his over-confi- dence in himself.'' He had gained his kingdom by the assistance of Agesilaus, and had preserved himself in it by the prudence and valour of Diaphantus an Athenian, and Lamius a Spartan, who managing his wars and commanding his armies for him made him victorious against the Persians in all the attempts which they had hitherto made upon him; with which being elevated, he thought himself now sufficient to conduct his own affairs, and therefore dis- missing those by whose help he had hitherto subsisted, he was now ruined for want of it. An. 349. Oclms 10.] — Ochus having thus mastered this war, and recovered Phoenicia and Egypt again to his crown, he nobly rewarded the service of Mentor the Rhodian.' The other Greeks he had sent back into their owTi country, with ample rewards, before he left- Egypt; but the success of the whole expedition being chiefly owing to Mentor, he not only gave him one hundred talents, with many other valuable gifts, but also made him governor of the Asiatic coasts, and committed to his charge the management of the war which he still had with some of the provinces that had there revolted from him in the beginning of his reign, and made him generalissimo of all his forces in those parts. Mentor having thus gained so great a share in the favour of Ochus, he made use of it to reconcile unto him Memnon his brother, and Artabazus who had married their sister; for they had both been in a war against him. Of the 1 Chap. xxix. vpr. 14, 15. 9 Syncellus, p. 256. 3 Vide Vossiuinde mstoricis Graccis.r. 14. 4 Diodor. Sic. lib. 16. p. 535. 5 Idem, lib. 16. p. 537. TIJK OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 3(53 revolt of Artabazus, and the several victories which he had gained over the king's forces, I have already spoken; but he being at length overpowered, took refuge with Philip king of Macedon; and Memnon, who had joined with him in those wars, was forced to bear with him the same banishment. After this reconciliation they both became very serviceable to Ochus, his successors of that race, especially Memnon, who was a person of the greatest valour and military skdl of any of his time. And Mentor was not wanting in answering that confidence which the king had placed in him: for, when settled in his province, he soon restored the king's authority in those parts, and made all that had revolted aga'n submit to him. Some he circumvented by stratagem and military skill, and others he subdued by open force, and so wisely managed all his advantages, that at length he reduced all again under their former yoke, and thoroughly re-established the king's affairs in all those provinces. An. 348. Ochus. II.] — In the first year of the one hundred and eighth 01pm- piad, died Plato,' the famous Athenian philosopher. The most eminent of his scholars was Aristotle, the founder of the Peripatetic philosophy. He was by birth of Stagira," a small city on the River Strymon, in the northern confines of Macedonia. He was born in the first year of the ninety-ninth Olympiad (which was the year before Christ 384.) At the age of seventeen he came to Athens, and became one of the scholars of Plato, and heard him till his death. Speusippus succeeding Plato in his school, Aristotle went into Asia, to Hermias the eunuch, who was king of Atarna, a city of Mysia, and having married his niece, lived Avith him three years; till at. length Hermias, beinsr circumvented and drawn into a snare by Mentor the Rhodian, who commanded for Ochus in those parts, was taken prisoner, and sent to the Persian court, where he was put-to death. Hereon Aristotle fled to Mitylene, and from thence v/ent into Macedonia, and became preceptor to Alexander the Great, with whom he tarried eight years. After this he returned to Athens, and there taught the Peripathetic philosophy in the Lyceum twelve years. But being accused of holding some notions contrary to the religion there established, and not daring to venture himself on a new trial, for fear of Socrates' fate, he withdrew to Chalcis, a town in Eubcea, and there died about two years after, being then sixty-three years old. While he lived with Hermias in Asia, he there fell ac- quainted with a Jew of wonderful wisdom,^ temperance, and goodness, who came thither from the upper parts of Asia upon some business which he had on those maritime coasts, and, having frequent conversation with him, learned much from him. This Josephus tells us, from a book written by Clearchus, who was one of the chiefest of Aristotle's scholars. And from what he then learned from this Jew, it is most likely, proceeded what Aristobulus,* and out of him Clemens Alexandrinus, have observed of Aristotle's philosophy, that is, that it contains many things which agree with what is written by Moses and the prophets in the scriptures of the Old Testament. An. 347. Ochus 12] — Ochus, after he had subdued Egypt, and reduced again all the revolted provinces, gave himself wholly up to his ease, spending the rest of his life in luxury, laziness, and pleasure;^ and left the administration of his affairs wholly to his ministers; the chiefest of which were Bagoas his favourite eunuch, and Mentor the Rhodian, who agreeing to part the power between them, the former governed all the provinces of the Upper Asia, and the latter those of the Lower. An. 341. Ochus 18.] — Johanan, high-priest uf the Jews, died in the eigheenth year of Ochus, after lie had been in that office thirty-two years,'' and was suc- ceeded by Jaddua his son, who held it twenty years.' An. 338. Ockus ':2I.] — Ochus died after he had reigned twenty-one years,' 1 Diogenes Laertius in Platone. Dionysiiis Halicarnesseus in Epistola and AmmaBum ns. king in his stead, and put all the rest to death; thinking that, by thus ^emo^^r:<; all rivals, he might best secure to himself the authority which he had u?^ rpeJ; for the name of king w^as all that he allowed to Arses; the power and authority of the government he wholly reserved to himself. Philip, king of Macedon," having overthrown the Thebans and Athenians in a great battle, at Chseronea, made himself thereby in a manner lord of all Greece; and, therefore,'' calling together at Corinth an assembly of all the Grecian cities and states, he there caused himself to be chosen captain-general of all Greece, for the carrying on of a war against the Persians, and made every city to be taxed at a certain number of men, which each of them was to send and maintain in this expedition. jln. 338. ^rses 2.] — And the next year after,^ he sent Parmenio, Amyntas, and Attalus, three of his chiefest captains, into Asia to begin the war, purposing soon after to follow in person with all his forces, and carry the war into the heart of the Persian empire. But when he was just ready to set forward on this expedition, he was slain at home,® while he was celebrating the marriage of Cleopatra, his daughter, with Alexander king of Epirus. Pausanias, a young Qoble Macedonian, and one of his guards, having had his body forced and sodo- mitically abused, by Attalus, the chief of the king's confidants, he had often complained to Philip of the injury; but finding no redress, he turned his revenge from the author of the injury, upon him that refused to do him justice for it, and slew him as he was passing in great pomp to the theatre to finish the solem- nities whereby he honoured his daughter's marriage. It is'" observed by Dio- dorus, that, in this solemnity, the images of the twelve gods and goddesses 1 ninrt. Si.-, lib. 17. p. 504.' 2. Idem, lib. 16. p. 537. .■$ Sev!Tii8f?iiipitiiis, lib. 2. ^liani Var. Hist. lib. 4. c. 8. Siiidas in f!%oc. 4 /KILini Var. Hi.-t. lib. (i. c. 8. 5 Diori. Sic. lib. 17. p. .564. 6 Pliitar.-h. ill Df iiin&tbpne o.t Phocinnp. Diort. Sic. lib. Iti. p 555. Jiistin. lib. 0. c. 3. 7 Justin, lib. 9. c. 5. Diodor. Sic. lib. 16. p. 557. 8 Justin, et Diorior. ibid. 0 Justin, lib. 9. c 6. Diodor. Sic. lib. lU. p. 558, 559. 10 Diodor. Sic. lib. 16. p. 558. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. , 365 being carried before him into the theatre, he added his own for the thirteenth, dressed in the same pompous habit, whereby he vainly arrogated to himself the honour of a god; but he being slain as soon as this image entered the theatre, this very signally proved him to be a mortal. After his death he was succeeded by Alexander his son, being then twenty years old. About the same time. Arses king of Persia' was slain by the like treachery, but not for so just a cause. For Bagoas, iinding that Arses began to be ap- prised of all his villanies and treasons, and was taking measures to be revenged on him for them, for the preventing hereof, he came beforehand with him, and cut off him, and all his family. Jin. .335. Darius 1.] — After Bagoas had thus made the throne vacant by the murder of Arses, he placed on it Darius,^ the third of that iiame that reigned in Persia. His true name was Codomannus; that of Darius he took afterward when he came to be king. He is said not to be of the royal family, because he was not the son of any king that reigned before him. However, he was of the royal seed, as descended from Darius Nothus; for that Darius had a son called Ostanes, of whom mention is made in Plutarch,^ and he had a son called Arsanes,^ Avho marrying Sysigambis, his sister, was by her the father of Codo- mannus. This Ostanes, Ochus'^ put to death on his first ascending the throne, and with him above eighty of his sons and grandsons. How Codomannus came to escape this slaughter is no where said; only it is to be observed, that in the former part of Ochus's reign, he made a very poor figure; for he was then no more than an Astanda,'' that is, one of the public posts, or couriers that carried the royal despatches through the empire. If we suppose him to have been the chiefest of them, in the same manner as there is a postmaster in England, and a chaous-bashee at Constantinople, over all the rest of that order and employ ment (which is the highest interpretation the word will bear,) this will be but a low office for one of the royal blood to be emjployed in. But in the war which Ochus had with the Cadusians, toward the latter end of his reign, a bold cham- pion of that nation having challenged the whole Persian army to find him a man io fight a single combat with him,'' and Codomannus having accepted the challenge after all others had refused, and slain the Cadusian, for*the reward of this action he was made governor of Armenia, and from thence, after the death of Arses, by the means of Bagoas, ascended the throne in the manner as I have mentioned. But he had not been long on it, ere Bagoas finding that he was not one that would answer his purpose, in permitting him to govern all in his name (which was the thing he aimed at in his advancement,) resolved to remove him in the same manner as he had his predecessor; and accordingly provided a poi- sonous potion for him. But Darius being apprised of the design,* when the po- tion was brought to him, made him drink it all himself, and so got rid of the traitor by his own artifice, and thereby became thoroughly settled in the king- dom, without any farther difficulty. The character given of him is, that he was for his stature and make of his body the goodliest person in the whole Persian empire, and of the greatest personal valour of any in it, and of a disposition mild and generous; but having the good fortune of Alexander to enc^ounter with, he could not stand against it. And he had been scarce warm on the throne before he found this enemy preparing to dismount him from it. For Alexander, soon after his father's death," having called the general coun- cil of all the states and free cities of Greece to meet again at Corinth, there pre- vailed with them to be chosen his sircccssor in the same general command which they had conferred on him before his death, for a war against the Persians; and all, excepting the Lacedemonians, consented hereto. But the Avar which Alex- ander had with the Illyrians and Triballians, calling him north so far as the River Danube, in his absence, the Athenians, Thebans, and some other cities, 1 Idem, lib. 17. p. SIM. 2 Idom, ibifl. 3 In Artaxorxi;. 4 Diodor. Sic. lib. 1/. p. 564 5 Q,. (!iirtiiis, lib. 10. o. ."i. G Plutarch, do Fortuna Alexandri, ct in Vita ejusdrni. 7 Diodor. ibid. Justin, lib. 10. c. 3. 8 Diodor. ibid. 9 Jd.stin. lib. 11. c. i. Arrian. lib. 1. Diodor. Hie. lib. 17. p. 504. 366 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF agreed to revoke this decree made in his favour, and entered into a confederacy iagainst him. But Alexander, returning conqueror from his northern wars, soon brake this league: for passing the Straits of Thermopylae with his victorious army,' he terrified the Athenians into a submission; and several other cities, following their example, made their peace with him; only the Thebans stood out. Whereon Alexander, laying siege to their city, took it by storm, and ab- solutely destroyed it, slaying ninety thousand of the inhabitants, and selling the rest to the number of thirty thousand more, into slavery. The severity of which execution spread such a terror of his arms overall Greece, as brought all to sub- mit. So that, in a second council which he called at Corinth, he was again chosen captain-general of all Greece against the Persians, by a universal suf- frage, and every city consented to its quota, both of men and money, for the carrying on of the war. Jin. 334. Darius 2.] — Hereon Alexander returned into Macedonia, and hav- ing by the next spring there gotten his forces together, marched with them to Sestus,^ and there passed the Hellespont into Asia. The army which he led thither, according to the highest account, amounted to no more than thirty thousand foot, and five thousand horse. And with so small an army he attempt- ed, and also accomplished, the conquest of the whole Persian empire, and added India also to this acquisition. But that which was most remarkable in this un- dertaking was, that he set out on it only with seventy talents,^ which was scarce sufficient to furnish the army with necessaries for thirty days: for the rest he wholly cast himself upon Providence, and Providence did not fail him herein: for, within a few days after, having encountered the Persian army at the river Granicus, he gained a great victory over them, though theyAvere above five times his number, which put him in possession, not only of Darius's trea- sure at Sardis, but also of all the provinces of Lesser Asia: for immediately all the Grecian cities in those parts declared for him, and, after that, several of the provinces made their submission to him, and those which did not were subdued by force; and in these transactions was spent the remaining part of the year. Before he went into winter-quarters,'' he ordered all of his army that had married that year to return into Macedonia, and spend the winter with their wives, and return again in the spring, appointing three captains over them to lead them home, and bring them back again at the time appointed; which ex- actly agreeing with the Jewish law (Deut. xxiv. 5,) and being without any in- stance of the like to be found in the usages of any other nation, it is most likely Aristotle learned it from the Jew he so much conversed with Trhilo in Asia, and approving of it as a most equitable usage, communicated it to Alexander, while he was his scholar, and that he from hence had the inducement of prac- tising it at this time. An. 333. Darius 3.] — The next year after in the beginning of the spring,* he reduced Phrygia under his obedience, and after that Lycia, Pisidia, Pamphylia, Paphlagonia, and Cappadocia, and settled all these provinces under the govern- ment of such of his followers as he thought fit to appoint. In the interim, Darius was not wanting to prepare for his defence.® The ad vice which Memnon the Rhodian then gave him, was to carry the war into Macedonia; and a wiser course could not be taken to extricate him out of the difficulties he was then involved in: for he would be sure there to have the La- cedemonians, and several other of the Grecian states who maligned the Macedo- nian power, to join with him; which would soon have brought back Alexander out of Asia, to defend his own country. Darius being made fully sensible of the reasonableness of this advice, resolved to follow it, and therefore committed the execution of it to its author, making Memnon admiral of his fleet, and cap- iain-general of all his forces that were appointed for this expedition; and he 1 riiitarch. in Alexandro. Arrian. lib. 1. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. p. 5G6, &:c. 2 Arrian. lib. 1. Plutarch, in Alexandre 3 At the highest reckoning it comes to no more than 14,437/. 10s. of our money. 4 Arrian. lib. '. 5 Flutarchus in Alexandre. Q Curtius, lib. 3 Arrian. lib. 1. Uiodor. Sic. lib. JV. r> Ibid. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 36? could not have made a better choice; for he was the wisest man and the ablest general that Darius had of his side, and for some years had very faithfully ad- hered to the Persian interest, and was one of their generals at the battle of Gra- nicus; and, had he been hearkened to by the other generals, the misfortune which there happened would have been avoided: for his advice was, not then to have hazarded battle, but to have desolated the country through which the Macedonians were to march; and, had this been followed, Alexander would have been forced soon to have returned for want of provisions to support his army. But the rashness and folly of the other generals overbearing what he wisely offered, that defeat ensued which opened the way to the ruin of the Per- siaji empire. However, he did not desert Darius's interest on the misfortune of that day; but having gathered up the remains of the Persian army, retreated with them first to Miletus, and from thence to Halicarnassus, and, lastly, to the isle of Cos, where Darius's commission and the Persian fleet meeting him he set himself on the executing of the design committed to his charge; in orderwhere- to he took in Chios and all Lesbos, except Mitylene, purposing next to pass into Euboea, and from thence to have made Greece and Macedonia *the seat of the war. But that city holding out a siege, he there unfortunately died, which proved the ruin of that design, and the ruin of the Persian empire was the con- sequence of it. For Darius having no other general of valour and wisdom equal lo hir. for the carrying on of that undertaking, he was forced to drop it. And therefore having nothing now to depend upon for his defence but his eastern a'-mies,' he drew them altogether at Babylon, to the number, saith Plutarch, of six hundred thousand men, and marched from thence to meet the enemy; which Alexander hearing of, made haste through Cilicia to take possession of the straits which led from that country into Syria, purposing there to expect and fight the Persian aimy: for within those straits there not being room any where to draw up above thirty thousand men in battle array, the Macedonians could there bring ad their men to fight, and the Persians scarce the twentieth part of theirs; and therefore, should it there come to a battle, they would have no advantage of 'ueir numbers. Some of the Greeks who followed Darius, seeing the disad- vantage he would have in fighting in that place, advised him to march back into the plains of Mesopotamia, and there expect the enemy, where he might have room enough to draw up his great army, and bring them all to bear their part in the battle; but the flattery of the courtiers, and his adverse fate, would not suffer him to hearken to this advice: for he was made believe that Alexan- der was withdrawing from him, and that therefore he ought to press forward to take him, while entangled in those straits, lest otherwise he should escape his hands. This drew Darius to fight in those straits, where, being able to extend his front no longer than the Macedonians, by reason of the mountains which enclosed him on either side, he could dispose of his great army no otherwise than by drawing them up in many lines one behind the other. But the valoui of the INIacedonians soon breaking the first line, and that being made to recoil upon the second, and that hereby again upon the third, and so on, this did soon put the whole Persian army into disorder; and the Macedonians pursuing the advantage, by pressing forward upon those that fled, this increased, the confu- sion, till at length their whole army was driven to a rout; and the crowd which was made in the flight of so numerous an army through those narrow passes being very great, the greatest number that fell that day were of such as were trampled to death by their own men as they pressed to escape. Darius, who fought in the first line, with great difficulty got out of the rout, and secured himself by flight; but all his camp, bag and baggage, with his mother, wife and children (which, according to the usage of the Persian kings, Avere carried with him in the campaign,) fell into the enemy's hands, and above one hun- dred thousand Persians were left dead upon the field of battle. This battle was fought at Issus in Cilicia*, toward the latter end of the year, about the beginning I Plut. in Alexandro. Q. Curtius. lib. 3. Arrian. lib. 2. Dioilor. Sic. lib. 17. 368 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF of our November: and the immediate consequence of it to the advantage of Alexander was, that it settled all the provinces behind him in their subjection to him, and added all Syria to his former acquisitions, the capital whereof was Damascus. Thither Darius, before the battle, had sent his treasure and most of his valuable moveables, with his concubines, and the greatest number of the court ladies that followed the camp, under a guard to protect them. All these, with the town, the governor, as soon as he heard of the flight of Darius, betray- ed unto Alexander, and Parmenio was sent to take possession of the place; where, besides a vast treasure in money and plate, he found three hundred and twenty-nine of Darius's concubines, and a great many other ladies, that were the wives or daughters of the principal nobility of Persia, whom he made all captives. And among them w^as Barsena, the widow of Memnon, who being a lady of great beauty, as soon as she came into the sight of Alexander, she made a captive of him; for he fell in love with her, and taking her into his bed, had a son by her, called Hercules, who at the age of seventeen, being called for by the Macedonians" to be their king, was murdered by the treachery of Cassander and Polysperchon to prevent it. While Parmenio took in Damascus and Ccele-Syria,' Alexander marched with the main of his army along the sea-coasts toward Phoenicia. As he ad- vanced, all yielded to him, and none more readily than the Sidonians. Eighteen years before, Ochus had miserably destroyed that city, and all in it, as hath been above related. On his going back again into Persia, those who by being absent on traffic at sea, or on other occasions, had escaped that massacre, re- turned and again built their city. But ever after detesting the Persians for their cruelty to it, they were glad of this occasion of shaking off their yoke, and therefore were of the first in those parts that sent to Alexander on his march that way to make their submission to him. But when he came to Tyj-e, he there found a stop. As he approached their territories, the Tyrians sent ambassadors to him with presents to himself, and provisions for his army: but ■being rather desirous to have peace with him as a friend, than willing to submit to him as a master, when he would have entered their city, they denied him admittance; which Alexander, now flushed Avith so many victories, not being able to bear, resolved to force them by a siege, and they, on the other hand, resolved to stand it out against him. What encouraged them to this resolution, was the strength of the place, and the confidence which they had in the assist- ance promised them by their allies. For the city then stood on an island, 5vt the distance of half a mile from the shore, and was fortified with a strong wall drawn round it, upon the brink of the sea, of one hundred and fifty feet in height; and the Carthaginians, who were a powerful state, "and then masters of the seas, had engaged to send them succours in the siege. And what gave them this confidence for the war, gave Alexander no less trouble in mastering the difficulties which he found in it; for the city being so situated (as I have said,) he had no way of approaching to it for the making of an as- sault, but by carrying a bank from the continent through the sea to the island on which the city stood. ^^n. 332. Darius 4.] — And therefore having resolved at any rate to talce that city, he resolved on the making of such a bank to approach it, which he ac- complished, with unwearied labour, in seven months' time, and, by jneans thereof, at length took the city. Had he here suffered a baffle, it Avould have conduced much to the sinking of his credit, and this might have lessened his success every where else in the future progress of his affairs; of which being thoroughly sensible, he spared no pains to surmount this obstacle, and by assi- duous application, at last carried his point. To make this bank or ca'usey, the town of Old Tyre, which lay on the continent, furnished him with stones and rubbish (for he pulled it all down for this purpose,) and Mount Libanus, which 1 Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. Plutarch, in Alexandre. Q. Curtius, lib. 4. Arrian. lib. 2. Josephus, lib. 11. c. 8. I'iBtin. lib. ir. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 369 is so famous in scripture for its cedars, being near, supplied him with timber for the work. And by this means having carried home his causey from the conti- nent to the island, he there stormed the town and took it. And that bank or causey is there still remaining even to this day,' and of the very same length as anciently described, that is, of half a mile; whereby what was formerly an island at that distance from the shore was thenceforth made a peninsula, and so it hath ever since continued. The Carthaginians having troubles at home, the Tyrians could not have from them that assistance which was promised; however, they fainted not in their resolutions of standing to their defence, and therefore, when Alexander sent to them ambassadors with terms of peace they threw them into the sea, and went on with the war. But many of them, for fear of the worst, sent their wives and children to Carthage. They had in their city a brazen statue or colossus of Apollo, of a great height. This formerly belonged to the city of Gela in Sicily: the Carthaginians having taken Gela in the year 405,'- sent it to Tyre, their mother city, where it was set up and worshipped by the Tyrians. During tljis siege, a Tfancy taking them, upon a dream which some one among them had to this purpose, that Apollo was about to leave them, and go over to Alexander, for the preventing hereof, they chained this statue with golden chains to the altar of Hercules, thinking thereby forcibly to detain this their god from goino- from them. To such ridiculous imaginations and superstitions was the relio-ion of those times degenerated. But whatever confidence they might then place in their false gods, the oracles of the true God having destinated them to de- struction, this became their fate. For although what is predicted of the "destruc- tion of Tyre by Isaiah, chap, xxiii. and by Ezekiel, chap. xxvi. — xxviii. was in part verified in the destruction of that city by Nebuchadnezzar, yet there are several particulars in these prophecies which seem applicable to this only. Foi Nebuchadnezzar's devastation reached no further than Old Tyre; those that were in the island escaped that ruin. But the desolation of both is plainly threatened in some parts of these prophecies, that is, of that which stood on the island as well as that which w-as on the continent; and this Alexander only ef- fected. Old Tyre he wholly demolished to make his causey to the New; by the means of which, having taken that new town, he burnt it down to the ground, and destroyed or enslaved all the inhabitants: eight thousand he slew in the sackage of the town, and two thousand of those he took prisoners he caused to be crucified. Those who were before sent to Carthage escaped this ruin, and a great number were saved by the Sidonians','' and secretly conveyed away in their ships, on the taking of the place; all the rest, to the number of thirty thousand, w-ere sold for slaves. The cruelty to the two thousand who were crucified, was unworthy of a generous conqueror. This Alexander did to gratify his rage, for being so long detained before the place, and there so va- liantly resisted; but afterward, to palliate the matter, he gave out, that it was done by way of just revenge upon them, for their murdering their masters, and that, being slaves by origin, crucifixion was the punishment proper for them. This depended upon an old story: for some ages before,^ the slaves of Tyre having made a conspiracy against their masters, murdered them all in one nio-ht (save only Strato, whom his slave secretly saved,) and marrying their mis- tresses, continued masters of the town; and from them the present Tyrians be- ing descended, Alexander pretended thus to revenge on them the murder com- mitted by their progenitors some ages before; and, to make it look the more plausible, he saved all the family of Strato, as not being involved in that guilt, and, among them, Azelmelic their king, who was of it, and continued the crown still to him and his family, after he had again repeopled the place: for, having thus ridded it of its former inhabitants, he planted it anew with colonies drawn 1 See MaiiiKirel's Journey from Aleppo lo Jerusalem, p. 48—50. 2 Diodcir.Sic. lil). IX p. 3it0. 3 The number of those wtio were thus saved, Curlius tells us, were fifteen thousand. 4 Justin, lib. 18. c. 3. Vol. 1.-47 370 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF from the neighbouring places, and from thence would be esteemed the founder of that city, though in truth he was the cruel destroyer of it. On his taking this city he unchained Apollo, rendered thanks to him for his intentions of coming over to him, sacrificed to Hercules, and did a great many other superstitious follies, which were reckoned as acts of religion in those days, and then marched toward Jerusalem. For the Tyrians, being wholly given to merchandize, and neglecting husband- ry, were mostly supplied with provisions by their neighbours; and Galilee,' Sa- maria, and Judea, being the countries from which they were chiefly furnished Alexander, when he sat down before Tyre, was forced to seek for his provisions from the same quarters; and, therefore, sent out his commissaries to require the inhabitants to submit to him, and furnish him with all necessaries for the sup- port of his army. The Jews pleaded their oath to Darius;^ by which thinking themselves obliged not to own any new master, so long as he lived, would not obey his commands. This exceedingly angered Alexander, who in the flush of his late victories thinking all ought to submit to him, could bear no contradic- tion herein. And therefore, as soon as he had done with Tyre, he marched against Jerusalem, with intention to punish the Jews as severely as he had the Tyrians, for not obeying his commands. In this distress, Jaddua the high-priest, who had then the immediate government of that people under the Persians, being in great perplexity, and all Jerusalem with him, they had no other course to take, but to fling themselves upon God's protection, and implore his mercy to them for their deliverance from this danger; and,. therefore, in order hereto, they made their devout addresses unto him with sacrifices, oblations, and pray- ers. By which God, being moved to compassion toward them, directed Jaddua; in a vision of the night, to go out and meet the conqueror in his pontifical robes, with the priests attending him in tlieir proper habits, and all the people in white garments. Jaddua, in obedience hereto, the next day went forth in the manner directed, with the priests and people ranged as in a sacred procession, and all habited as the vision commanded, and advancing to a place called Sapha^ (an eminence without Jerusalem, which commanded a prospect of all the country round, as well as of the city and temple of Jerusalem,) there waited the com- ing of Alexander, and, on his approach, met him in this pompous and solemn manner. As soon as the king saw the high-priest in this manner coming toward him, he was struck with a profound awe at the spectacle, and, hastening for- ward, bowed down to him, and saluted him with a religious veneration, to the great surprise of all that attended him, especially of the Syrians and Phoeni- cians, who expected nothing less than that Alexander should have destroyed this people as he had the Tyrians; and they came thither with an eager desire, out of the hatred they had to them, to bear a jiart in the execution. While all stood amazed at this behaviour, which was so much contrary to their expecta- tions, Parmenio asked the king the reason of it, and how it came to pass, that he, whom aU adored, should pay such adoration to the Jewish high-priest; to which he answered, that he did not pay that adoration to him, but to that God whose priest he was. For that, when he was at Dio in Macedonia, and there deliberating with himself how he should carry on his war against the Persians, and was in much doubt about the undertaking, this very person, and in this very habit, appeared to him in a dream, and encouraged him to lay aside all thoughtfulness and diffidence about this matter, and pass boldly over into Asia, promising him that God would be his guide in the expedition, and give him the i.mpire of the Persians; and that therefore, on his seeing this person, and know- ing him by his habit, as well as by his shape and countenance, that he was the very same that appeared to him at Dio, he assured himself from hence, that he made the present war under the conduct of God, and should certainly, by his 1 Acts xii. 20. 2 Josephus, lib. 1. c. 8. 3 It was so called from the Hebrew Zapha, which aignifietfa to see as from a watch tower, or any otuei eminence. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ^71 assistance, conquer Darius, and overthrow the Persian empire, and succeed in all things concerning it according to his desire; and that therefore, in the person of this his high-priest, he paid adoration unto him. Hereon, turning again to Jaddua, he kindly embraced him, and entered Jerusalem with him in a friendJy manner, and offered sacrifices to Gktd in the temple; where Jaddua having shown him the prophecies of Daniel,' which predicted the overthrow of the Persian empire by a Grecian king, he went from thence with the greater assurance of success in his farther carrying on of the war, not doubting, but that he was the person meant by those prophecies. All which particulars rendering him kindly affected to the Jews, he called them togetherwhenhe was on his departure, and bid them ask what they had to desire of him. Whereon they having petitioned him, that they might enjoy the freedom of their country, laws, and religion, and be exempted every seventh year from paying any tribute, because in that year, according to their law, they neither sowed nor reaped, Alexander readily granted them all this request; which brought another very troublesome solicita- tion upon him. For he was scarce gone but of Jerusalem, but he was accosted by the Sama- ritans," Avho met him in great pomp and parade, and prayed him, that he would honour also their city and temple with his presence. These are Josephus's words; and they plainly prove, that the temple which they invited Alexander to must have been built long before that time, and not by leave from him, while he was at the siege of Tyre, as he elsewhere by mistake relates. For if it had not been built, but by leave from him while at that siege, the first founda- tions of it could scarce have been laid by this time. For the siege of Tyre lasted only seven months, and immediately from the taking of it he came to Jerusa^ lem. The same Josephus indeed tells us, that Alexander from Tyre went im- mediately to Gaza, and did not, till after two months more spent in the taking of that city, come to Jerusalem. But herein he must be again mistaken:^ for Jerusalem lying in the way from Tyre to Gaza, it is by no means likely, that Alexander should from Tyre go directly to Gaza, then passing by Jerusalem, and after return three or four days' march with all his army back again to that city; or that he should at all think it safe to begin the siege ofi|Gaza, while such a city as Jerusalem was left untaken behind him: and moreover, all that write of the life and actions of Alexander, tells us, that from the taking of Gaza, he went directly into Egypt. And, therefore, taking it for certain, that his pro- gress was from Tyre to Jerusalem, and from thence to Gaza, I have related it in this order. However, supposing it were otherwise, there would hereby be only two months more added to the seven above mentioned for the building of this temple, the siege of Gaza lasting no longer; and this would not much mend the matter, it being as improbable that such a temple could be built in nine months as in seven. When the Jews refused to obey that summons, which Alexander sent them from Tyre to submit to him,'' these Samaritans readily complied with it, and, to ingratiate themselves the more with him, sent eight thousand of their men to assist him in that siege; and, valuing themselves upon this merit, thought they had a much better title to his favour than the Jews, and therefore, finding how well the Jews had fared, thought they might obtain at least the same, if not much greater grants from him; and, in order hereto, made this procession to invite him to their city, and the eight thousand Samaritans that were in Alex- ander's army joined with them herein. Alexander answered them kindly, tell- ing them, that he was hastening into Egypt, and had not then time to spare; but that when he should come back again, he Avould comply with their desires as far as his affairs would permit. They then requested of him to be discharged from paying tribute o:i the seventh year. Hereon Alexander asked them, 1 That is, wh-it is wrilton in naiiiel of the ram and he-goat, (chap, viii.) where that he-soat is interpreted lo be the kine of Grccia, who should conquer the Medcs and Persians (ver. 21,) and also what is written by the same prophet of this said Grecian king (^chiip. xi. 3.) For both these prophecies foretold the destruction of the Persian empire by a Grecian king. 2 Josephus, lib. 1. c B. 3 Vide Usserii Annaiwwib Anno Mundi 3073. 4 Josephus. lib. 1. C. ft. 372 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF whether they were Jews? for to them only had he granted this privilege. To this they answered, that they were Hebrews, who, observing the same law as the Jews did, neither reaped nor sowed in that year, and he having, for this reason granted the Jews this immunity, they desired of him, that, having the same plea for it, they might have the same grant also. Alexander, not being then at lei- sure to make fuU inquiry into this matter, referred this also to his return, telling them, that then he would fuUy inform himself as to what they proposed, and would do therein what should be reasonable, and then marched on to Gaza. • On his arrival at that city,' he found it strongly garrisoned under one of Da- rius's eunuchs, named Betis, who being a very valiant man, and very faithful to his master, defended it to the utmost; and it being the inlet into Egypt, Alexander could not pass thither till he had taken it. This necessitated him to set down before it; and notwithstanding that the utmost of military skill, and the utmost of vigour and application, was made use of in the assailiAg of the place, yet it cost Alexander and all his army two months' time before they could master it. The stop v/hlch this did put to his intended march into Egypt, and two dangerous wounds which he received in the s!ege, provoked his anger to that degree, that, on his taking the place, he treated the commander and all else that he found in it with inexcusable cruelty. For having slain ten thou- sand of the men, he sold all the rest with their wives and children into slavery; and when Betis was brought to him (whom they took alive in that assault wherein they carried the place,) instead of treating him in a manner suitable to his valour and fidelity, as a generous conqueror ought to have done, he or- dered his heels to be bored, and a cord to be drawn through them, and caused him thereby to be tied to the hinder part of a chariot, and dragged round the city till he died, bragging, that herein he imitated his progenitor Achilles, who, as Homer has it, thus dragged Hector round the walls of Troy. But tliat was a barbarous act in the example, and much more so in the imitation: for it was only Hector's dead carcass that Achilles dragged round Troy; but Alexander thus treated Betis while alive, and thus made him die in a cruel manner, for no other cause, but that he faithfully and valiantly served his master in the post committed to hiafcharge: which was deserving of a reward even from an ene- my, rather than of so cruel a punishment; and Alexander whould have acted accordingly, had he made the true principles of virtue and generosity, rather than the fictions of Homer, the rule of his actions. But that young conqueror having the Iliads of this poet in great admiration, always carried them with him, laid them under his pillow when he slept, and read in them on all leisure opportunities, and therefore, finding Achilles to be the great hero of that poem, he thought ever}^ thing said of him in it worthy of his imitation, and the rea- diest way to make him an hero also; and the vanity of being thought such, and the eager desire which he had of making his name in like manner to be cele- brated in after ages, was the main impulsive cause of all his undertakings. But, in realit}"-, were all his actions duly estimated, he could deserve no other character than that of the great cut-throat of the age in which he lived. But the folly of mankind, and the error of historians, is such, that they usually make the actions of war, bloodshed, and conquest, the subject of their highest encomiums, and those their most celebrated heroes that most excel therein. In a righteous cause, and the just defence of a man's country, all actions of valour are indeed just reasons of praise; but in all other cases, victory and conquest are no more than murder and rapine; and every one is to be detested, as the greatest enemy to mankind, that is most active herein. Those only are true heroes, who most benefit the world by promoting the peace, welfare, and good of mankind; but such as oppress it with the slaughter of men, the desolation of countries, the burning of cities, and the other calamities which -attend war are the scourges of God, the Attilas of the age in which they live, and the greatest plagues and calamities that can happen to it, and which are never sent 1 Jos;«phus, lib. 1. c. 8. Plutarch, in Alexandre, d, Curtius, lib. 4. c. 6. Arrian. lib. 2. Dioiior. Sic. !.•. 17. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 373 mto the world but for the punishment of it; and therefore ought, as such, to be prayed against, and detested by all mankind. To make these the subject of praise and panegyric, is to lay ill examples before princes, as if such oppres- sif ns of mankind were the truest ways to honour and glory. And we knew a late prince, who, having broke through treaties, leagues, and oaths, to rob his neighbours of their territories, gave no other reason for the war, but that it was for his glory. And it is too plain, that the like vain and false notions of gain- ing glory in this way, is that grand impulse upon the minds of princes, which moves them to most of those destructive wars upon each other, whereby the peace of the world is so often disturbed, and such great mischiefs and cala- mities brought upon mankind. As soon as Alexander had finished the siege of Gaza, and settled a garrison there,' he marched directly for Egypt, and on the seventh day after arrived at Pelusium, where he was met by great numbers of Egyptians, who thither flocked to him to own him for their sovereign, and make their submission to him; for their hatred to the Persians was such, that they were glad of any new comer that would deliver them from that insolence and indignity with which they treated them and their religion. For how bad soever "any religion may be (and a worse than that of the Egyptians could scarce any where be con- trived,) yet as long as it is their national religion, no nation will bear affront and indignity to be offered to it; and nothing usually provokes a people more than such a treatment. Ochus had slain their god Apis in a manner of indig- nity, the most affronting that could be offered to them, or their religion; and the Persians whom he left to govern the country carried on the humour of treat- ing them in the same manner; which raised their indignation against them to so great a height, that when Amyntas came thither a little before but with a handful of men, they were all ready to have joined with him, for the driving of the Persians out of the country. This Amyntas having revolted from Alex- ander to Darius, was one of the commanders of the mercenary Greeks at the battle of Issus,-* from whence having brought off four thousand of his men, he got to Tripoli in Syria, and having seized as many of the ships which he found there as would serve his purpose, he burned the rest, and sailed thence, first to Cyprus, and then to Pelusium in Egypt, and siezed that place: for, coming thither under pretence of a commission from Darius to be governor of Egypt, in the room of Sabaces the former governor, who was slain at Issus, he, by this means, got quiet admission thither; but as soon as he had made himself master of that strong fortress, he declared his intentions of seizing Egypt for himself, and driving the Persians thence; and great numbers of the Egyptians, out of hatred to the Persians, readily joined with him for this purpose; whereon he marched directly for Memphis, the capital of that kingdom, and in the first bat- tle which he had with the Persians, he got the victory, and shut them up within the walls of that city. But after this success, Amyntas permitting his soldiers to straggle for the plundering of the country, the Persians took the advantage of sallying upon them, while thus scattered, and cut them all off to a man, and Amyntas with them. However, this did not quell the aversion which the Egyptians bore the Persians, but rather increased it. So that, when Alexandei entered that country, he found the people universally disposed to receive him with open arms; and therefore, lie had no sooner reached their borders, but multitudes of them came tliither to him to welcome him into the country, and make their submission to him. For he coming thither with a victorious army, was thereby enabled to give them tliorough protection, which they could not so well promise themselves from Amyntas; and, therefore, on his approach, they immediately, without reserve, all declared for him: whereon Mezaius, who com- manded at Memphis for Darius, seeing it in vain to struggle against such a power, submitted also, and opening the gates of that city to the conqueror. 1 Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. Q,. Curtiiis, lib. 4. Arrian. lib. 3. Plutarch, in Ale.xandro. 2 Arrian. lib. 2. a. Curtius, lib. 4. c. 3. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. p. 587, 588. 374 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF yielded up all to him; whereby, without any farther opposition, he became forth with master of the whole country. From Memphis he projected a journey to the temple of Jupiter Hammon, which was situated among the sands and deserts of Libya, at the distance of two hundred miles from Egypt. For Ham' the son of Noah, as he was the first planter of Egypt and Libya after the flood, so he became, in the idolatrous ages that after followed, the great god of those countries; and there being an island of about five miles' breadth of firm land among those deserts of sand, they there built a temple to him. He was the same whom the Greeks called Jupiter, and the Egyptians Ammon; and hence it is, that the city in Egypt which the scriptures call No Ammon^ (that is, the city of Ham or Ammon,) is by the Greeks called Diospohs (that is, the city of Jupiter.) Aftertimes did put the Egyptian name and the Greek name both together, and called him Jupiter Ham- mon. Alexander's journey to this temple was upon a design very foolish and vain-glorious, and, according to the religion of those times, altogether as impi- ous. For finding in Homer, and other fables of ancient times, that most of their heroes were described as sons of some god or other, and aiming to be celebrated a hero, as well as they, he would be thought the son of a god also, and, having chosen Jupiter Hammon to be his father in this farce, he sent mes- sengers before,^ to corrupt the priests, to cause him to be declared the son of that god by their oracle, when he should come to consult it, and then followed after to receive the honour of that declaration. In his way thither,^ observing a place over against the island of Pharus on the sea-coast, which he thought a very convenient place for a new city, he there built Alexandria, which thenceforth became the capital of that kingdom: for it having a very convenient port, and the Mediterranean before it, and the Nile and the Red Sea behind it, by virtue of these advantages it drew to it the trade both of the East and the West, and thereby soon grew up to be one ol the most flourishing cities of the world. But trade having taken another current in these latter ages, on the finding out of the way to India by the Cape of Good Hope, it is now degenerated into a poor village,* by the Turks called Scanderia, re- markable for nothing else but that it still shows some of the ruins of what it anciently was. Alexander, in the building of this city, made use of Deno- crates for his architect," whose name had been made famous in that art by his re- building the temple of Diana at Ephesus, which had been burned by Erostratus; and having, by his advice, drawn a plan of the city, and set out its walls, gates, and streets, he left him to perfect the work according to it, and went on his journey to the temple of Jupiter Hammon. It was from thence at the dis- tance of one thousand six hundred furlongs (that is, two hundred of our miles,) and most of the way was through sandy deserts; in which he did run two great hazards, the first, of being overwhelmed by the sands, and the other, of perish- ing for want of water. By the former, Cambyses lost an army of fifty thousand men in these deserts (as hath been above related,) and by the latter he had like to have been lost himself, and all with him, but that they were miraculously re- lieved by a shower of rain, when they Avere just ready to faint to death for want of it. And, indeed, all his other undertakings were of a piece Avith this, they being all a series of bold, rash, and dangerous actions, in which he must have perished an hundred times over, had not Providence in as miraculous a manner as now preserved him through all of them, for the bringing to pass of those events which he was designed for. Having, on his coming to the temple, there paid his devotions, and received from the oracle the declaration of his being Jupi- ter's son, which he went thither for, he returned in great triumph with that tide, and thenceforth in afl his letters, orders and decrees, styled himself King Alex- 1 Vide Bocharti Plialeg. lib. 1. c. 1. 2 Jer. xlvi. i!5. Ezek. xxx. 15. Nahum iii. 8. 3 Justin, lib. 11. c. 11. Orosius, lib. 3. c. Ifi. 4 Arrian. lib. 3. a. Ciirtius, lib. 4. c 8. Strabo, lib. 17. p. 59U. 9 See Tlievenot's Travels, part 1. book 2. c. 1, 2. i Plin. lib. 5. c. 10. Ammianus Marcellinus, lib. 22. c. 16. Strabo, lib. 14. p. 641 Soliiius. c. 32. 40. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 375 ander, son of Jupiter Ammon, giving it out that this god begot him on Olym- pias his mother in the shape of a serpent. But while he prided himself in the honour which he vainly assumed hereon, every body else despised him for the folly of it; however he persisted in it, did many acts of violence and cruelty to make it pass upon others, and suffered it to grow upon him with his pros- perity so far, as at length to affect the being thought a god himself, till in the conclusion, when Providence had no more for him to do, his death showed him to be a mortal like other men. In his return he came again to Alexandria, and took care to people his new city with colonies drawn thither from many other places,' among which were many of the Jews, to whom he gave great privdeges,^ not only allowing them the use of their own laws and religion, but also admitting them equally into the same franchises and liberties with the Macedonians themselves whom he planted there; and then, departing from thence, he returned to Memphis, and wintered in that place. It is remarked by Varro, that, at the time that Alexander built Alexandria in Egypt, the use of the papyrus for writing on was first found out in that coun- try. The papyrus,^ in its proper signification, is a sort of great bulrush growing .n the marshes of Egypt near the Nile. It runs up in a triangular stalk to the height of about fifteen feet, and is usually a foot and a half in circumference, and sometimes more. When the outer skin is taken off, there are next several films or inner skins, one within another, and naturally partable from each othei These, when separated, and flaked from the stalk, made the paper which the ancients used, and which from the name of the tree that bore it, they called also papyrus. The manner Mow it was fitted for use may be seen in the 11th and 12th chapters of the 13th book of Pliny's Natural History, and the book enti- tled De Papyro, which Guilandinus hath written by way of comment upon them. But the clearest and best account hereof is given us by Salmasius, in his com- ment on the life of Firmus in Vopiscus, who was one of the writers of the His- toria Augusta. From this papyrus it is, that what we now make use of to write upon hath also the name of paper* though of quite another nature from the an- cient papyrus of the Egyptians. Many other devices were made use of in for- mer times to find fit materials to write upon. Pliny tells us,'^ that the ancientesf way of writing was upon the leaves of the palm tree. Afterward they made use of the inner bark of a tree for this puipose:^ which inner bark being in Latin called Liber, and in Greek B.s>..,f from hence a book hath ever since, in the Latin language, been called Liber, and in the Greek b.3\o;, because their books anciently consisted of leaves made of such inner barks. And the Chi- nese still make use of such inner barks, or rinds of trees, to write upon, as some of their books brought into Europe plainly show. Another way made use pf among the Greeks and Romans, and which was as ancient as Homer (foi he makes mention of it in his poems,) was to write on tables of wood covered over with wax.' On these they wrote with a bodkin or style of iron, with which they engraved their letters on the wax; and hence it is that the different way of men's writings or compositions are called different styles. This way was mostly made use of in the writing of letters or epistles; hence such epistles are in Latin called Tabells," and the carriers of them Tabellarii.' When their epistles were thus written, they tied the tables together with a thread or string, setting their seal upon the knot, and so sent them to the party to whom they were directed, who, cutting the string, opened and read them. But, on the in- vention of the Egyptian papyris for this use,^ all the other ways of writing were soon superseded; no material till then invented being more convenient to write upon than this. And therefore, when Ptolemy Philadelphus," king of 1 Cl. Curlitis, lb. 4. c. 8. 2 Joseph, contra Apion. lib. 2. et de Bello Jiidaico. lib. 2. c. 36. 3 Plin. lib. 12. c. 13. Guilandinus de Papyro. I'ancirol. part 2. tit. 13. Salniulh in euiulein. Parkinson* tferbal, tribe 13. c. 39. 4 Vide Vossii Etymoloijicuii, in voce Papyrus. 5 Lib. 13. c. II. 6 Vide Vossii Etymologicon in voce Liber. 7 Vide Vossii Elymologicon in voce Tabula. 8 Vide Vossii Etymologicon in voce Papyrus. 9 riin. lib. 1.3. c. 11. 376 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Egypt, set up to make a great library, and to gather all sorts of books into it, he caused them to be all copied out on this sort of paper. And it was exported also for the use of other countries, till Eumenes, king of Pergamus, endeavour- ing '.o erect a library at Pergamus, which should outdo that at Alexandria, oc- casioned a prohibition to be put upon the exportation of that commodity. For the Ptolemy,' that then reigned in Egypt not liking that his library should be outdone by any other, to put a stop to Eumenes' emulation in this particular, forbade the carrying any more paper out of Egypt, thinking that, without it, he could no farther multiply his books. This put Eumenes upon the invention of making books of parchment, and on them he thenceforth copied out such of the works of learned men, as he afterward put into his library; and hence it is,* that parchment is called Pergamena in Latin; that is, from the city of Pergamus in Lesser Asia, where it was first used for this purpose among the Greeks. For that Eumenes, on this occasion, first invented the making of parchment cannot be true: for in Isaiah,' Jeremiah,* Ezekiel," and other parts of the holy scrip- tures, many ages before the time of Eumenes, we find mention made of rolls of writing; and who can doubt but that these rolls were of parchment? And it must be acknowledged that the authentic copy of the law, which Hilkiah found in the temple* and sent to king Josiah, was of this material; none other used for writing, excepting parchment only, being of so durable a nature, as to last from Moses' time till then (which was eight hundred and thirty years.) And it is said by Diodorus Siculus,' that the Persians of old wrote all their re- cords on skins. And Herodotus^ tells us of sheep-skins and goat-skins made use of in writing by the ancient lonians, many hundreds of years before Eu- menes' time. And can any one think, that these skins were not dressed and prepared for this use, in the same manner as parchments were in the aftertimes, though perchance not so artificially? It is possible Eumenes might have found out a better way of dressing them for this use at Pergamus, and perchance it thenceforth became the chief trade of the place to make them; and either of these is reason enough, from Pergamus, to call them Pergamense. These were found so useful for records and books, by reason of their durableness, that most of the ancient manuscripts we now have are written in them. But, from the time that noble art of printing hath been invented, the paper which is made of the paste of linen rags is that which hath been generally made use of, both in writing and in printing, as being the most convenient for both; and the use of parchment hath been most appropriated to records, registers, and instruments of law, for which, by reason of its durableness, it is most fit. The invention of making this sort of paper Mr. Ray puts very late: for he tells us, in his Her- bal," that it was not known in Germany till the year of our Lord 1470; that then, two men, named Antony and Michael, brought this art first to Basil, out of Galicia in Spain, and that from thence it was learned and brought into use by the rest of the Germans. But there must be a mistake in this; there being both printed books, as well as manuscripts, of this sort of paper, which are cer- tainly ancienter than the year 1470. There is extant a book called Catholicon,'" written by Jacobus de Janua, a monk, printed on paper at Mentz in Germany, Anno 1460; and therefore the Germans must have had the use of this sort of paper long before the time that Mr. Ray saith. And there are manuscripts written on this sort of paper that are much ancienter, as may be especially evi- denced in several registers w^ithin this realm, where the dates of the instru- ments or acts registered prove the time. There is, in the bishop's registry af "Norwich, a register book of wills, all made of paper, wherein registrations are made which bear date so high up as the year of our Lord 1-370, just one hun- dred years before the time that Mr. Ray saith the use of it begun in Germany. 1 Plin. lib. 13. C. 11. 2 Vide V»ssii Etymologicon in voce Pergamena. 3 Chap. viii. 1 4 Chap. x.\xvi. 5 Chap. ii. 9. iii. 1— 3. 0 2Kings .Txii. SChron. x.\.\iv. 7 Lib. 2. p.84. 8 Herodot. lib. 5. 9 Lib. 22. c. 2 10 This book is in the library collecteit by Dr. John Moor, late bishop of F.lv. See the O.xford Catalosufi o{ Jhe Manuscripts of England and Irelaii'.l, torn. 2. part 1. p. 379. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 377 And I have seen a registration of some acts of John Cranden, prior of Ely^ made upon paper, which bears date in the fourteenth year of King Edward II., that is, Anno Domini 1320. This invention seems to have been brought out of the east; for most of the old manuscripts in Arabic, and the other oriental lan- guages which we have from thence, are w^rittcn in this sort of paper; and some of them are certainly much ancienter than any of the times here mentioned about this matter. But w^e often find them written on paper made of the paste of silk, as well as of linen. It is most likely, the Saracens of Spain first brought it out of the east into that country; of which Galicia being a province, it might from thence, according to Mr. Ray, have been first brought into Germany; but it must have been much earlier than the time he says. Ptolemy the astronomer being an Egyptian, and a native of Alexandria, be- gins the reign of Alexander over the east from the bu\ding of this city And here ends the reign of Darius and the Persian empire; »'xd th;orefore I w'ill here also end this book. m BOOK VIII. Jdn. 331. ^lex. 1.] — Alexander, while he winteird at Memphis, settled the affairs of Egypt. The military command he intrusted only with his Macedoni- ans,' dividing the country into several districts, under each of which he placed lieutenants, independent of ^ach other, not thinking it safe to commit the whole military power of that large and populous country into one man's hands. But the civil government he placed wholly in Doloaspes, an Egyptian: for his in- tentions being, that the country should still be governed by its own laws and usages, he thought a native, who was best acquainted with them, the properest for this charge. And that the finishing of his new city Alexandria- (so called from his name) might be carried on with the more expedition and success, he appointed Cleomenes to be his supervisor in that work, who continued many years in this charge; and hence it is, that in Justin-' he is said to be the founder of that city. He was of Naucratis,* a Grecian city in Egypt, there built by a colony of the Milesians in times long before past.^ Alexander did also set him over the tribute of Arabia; but, being a very wicked man, he abused both these trusts, to the great oppression of all that were under him, till at length he re- ceived the just reward of all his evil deeds in an ignominious death: for Ptolemy, after he had possessed himself of Egypt, finding him plotting against him for the interest of Perdiccas,*^ caused him to be executed for it. There is extant a letter of Alexander's to him of a very odd nature: for therein commanding him, on the death of Hephestion, to build two temples to that favourite, one in Alexandria, and the other in the island of Pharus adjoining*, to excite his dili- gence herein, he promiseth him such a pardon as the pope often gives to his deluded votaries, that is,^ of all his evil deeds, past, presen{, and to come. But this did not save him from the just vengeance which Providence at length, by the hand of Ptolemy, brought upon him for all his wicked and unjust actions. When Alexander had thus disposed of all matters in Egypt, the spring draw- ing on, he hastened toward the east to find out Darius. In the way,* or. his return nig to Palestine, he had an account from thence which very much dis- pleased him. On his going from that country into Egypt, he had made Andro- machus, a special favourite of his, governor of Syria and Palestine; on whose coming to Samaria, to settle some matters there, the Samaritans mutinied against him, and rising in a tumult, set fire to the house in which he- was, and burned him to death. This, it is supposed, they did out of a rage and discontent that 1 Arrian. lib. 3. Q.. Curtius, lib. 4. c. 8. 2 Arrian. et CI. Curtius, ibid. Aristotelis OKcmiom. lib. 2. 3 Justin, lib. 13. c. 4. 4 Arrian. lib. 3. 5 Si raho, lib. 17. p. 801. Stephaiius and Siiidas in Mi£u/.p»ri; 6 Pausanias in Atticis. 7 Arrian. lib. 7. 8 Q. (,'iirtius, lib. 4. c. 8. EuHcbii Chron. p. 177. Cailrniiua Vol. 1.— 48 378 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF those privileges should be denied them which were granted to their enemies the Jews; whereas, by their services to Alexander, especially at the siege of Tyre, they thought they had merited much more from him than the other, who had then denied him their assistance. Alexander, being exceedingly exaspe- rated hereby against that people, as the fact sufficiently deserved, caused all that had acted any part in this murder to be put to death, and drove all the rest out of the city of Samaria, planting there, instead of them, a colony of his Macedonians, and giving their other territories to the Jews.' Those that sur- vived this calamity retired to Shechem, under Mount Gerizim; and from this time that place became the head seat of this people, and the metropolis of the Samaritan sect, and so continues even to this day. And whereas eight thousand Samaritans had joined him at Tyre, and followed his camp ever since, that they might not, on their return, revive this mutinous temper of their countrymen, to the creating of new disturbances," he sent them into Thebias, the remotest province of JE^ypt, and settled them on such lands as he there caused to be di- vided unto them. On Alexander's return into Phoenicia,^ he stayed some time at Tyre, that he might there settle the affairs of those countries which he was to leave behind him before he did set forward to acquire more. And, when he had there or- dered all matters as he thought fit, he marched with his whole army to Thap- sacus, and having there passed the Euphrates, directed his course toward the Tigris, in quest of the enemy. Darius, in the interim, having solicited Alex- ander for peace these several times, and finding, by his answers, that none was to be expected from him but on the terms of yielding to him the whole empire, applied himself to provide for another battle, in order whereto he got together at Babylon a numerous army, it being by one half bigger than that with which he fought at Issus,* and from thence took the field with it, and marched toward Nineveh. Thither Alexander followed after him, and having passed the Tigris, got up with him at a small village called Gaugamela; where it came to a deci- sive battle between them; in Avhich Alexander, with fifty thousand men (for that was the utmost of his number at that battle,) vanquished the vast army of the Persians which was above twenty times as big, and this in an open plain country, without having the advantage of straits to secure his flanks, as in the battle of Issus; and hereby the fate of the Persian empire was determined; for none after this could to any purpose make head against him, but all were forced to submit to the conqueror; and he thenceforth became absolute lord of that empire in the utmost extent in which it was ever possessed by any of the Per- sian kings. And hereby was fully accomplished all that which in the prophe- cies of Daniel was foretold concerning him.* This battle happened in the month of October, much about the same time of the year in Avhich was fought the bat- tle of Issus two years before; and the place where it was fought was Gaugamela in Assyria; but that being a small village, and of no note, they would not de- nominate so famous a battle from so contemptible a place, but called it the battle of Arbela, because that was the next town of any note, though it were at the distance of above twelve miles from the field where the blow was struck. Darius, after this defeat,^ fled into the Media, intending from thence, and the rest of the northern provinces of his empire, to draw together other forces for the farther trial of his fortune in another battle. Alexander pursued him a,y far as Arbela; but, before his arrival thither, he was, by the quickness of his flight, got out of his reach. However, he there took his treasure, and his royal equip- age and furniture, which was of vast value, and then returned to his camp; where, having allowed his army such time of rest as was necessary for their refreshment after the fatigue of the battle, he marched towards Babylon. Ma- 1 Josephus contra Apionein, lib. 1!. 2 Joseph. Antiq. lib. 11. c. 8. 3 Plutarch, ill Alexaiidro. Ci. Curtius.lib. 4. c. 8. Arrian. lib. 3. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. 4 Darius had in this battle about one million one hundred thousand men. 5 Dan. vii. 6. viii.5— 7. 20, 21. .\.20. .\i. 3. 6 Plutarch, in Alexandre, a. Curtius, lib. 5. Arrian. lib. 3. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17 THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 379 zaeus was governor of that city and the province belonging to it, and had been one of Darius's generals in the late battle; where, after the defeat, having gathered together as many of the scattered forces of the Persians as he could, he retreated with them to that place. But, on Alexander's approach with his victorious army, he had not tlie courage to stand out against him: but going forth to meet him, surrendered himself and all under his charge to him; and Bagaphanes, the governor of the castle where the greatest part of Darius's trea- sure was kept, did the same; and both acted herein as if they were at strife which of them should be most forward to cast off their old master and receive the new. After thirty days tarrying in that city, he continued Mazseus, for the reward of his treachery, in the government of the province; but, placing a Macedonian in the command of the castle, he took Bagaphanes along w ith him, and marched to Susa, and from thence, after the taking of that city, to Perse- polis, the capital of the empire, carrying victory with him over all the provinces and places in the way. Arriving at Persepolis about the middle of December, he gave the city to be sacked by his army, reserving only the castle and palace to himself Hence followed a vast slaughter upon the inhabitants, and all other barbarities which in this case used to be acted by soldiers, let loose to their rage and licentiousness. This city being the metropolis of the Persian empire, and that which of all others bote the greatest enmity to Greece, he did this, he said to execute the revenge of Greece upon it. After the cruelty of this exe- cutictfi was over, leaving Parme nio and Craterus in the place with the greatest part of his forces, he made a range with the rest over the neighbouring coun- tries, and having reduced them all to a submission to him, returned again to Persepolis after thirty days, and there took up his winter quarters. An. 330. Alex. 2.] — While Alexander lay at this place,' he gave himself much to feasting and drinking, for joy of his victories, and the great conquests he had made. In one of his feasts, wherein he entertained his chief com- manders, he invited also their misses to accompany them; one of which was Thais, a famous Athenian courtesan, and then miss to Ptolemy, who was after- ward king of Egypt. This woman, in the heat of their carousals, proposed to Alexander the burning down of the city and palace" of Persepolis, for the re- venging of Greece upon the Persians, especially for the burning of Athens by Xerxes. The Avhole company being drunk, the proposal was received with a general applause, and Alexander himself, in the heat of his wune, running into the same humour, immediately toc-k a torch, and all the rest of the company doing the same, they all went thus armed with him at their head, and, setting fire to the city and palace, burned bcth to the ground; which Alexander, when he came again to his senses, exceedii gly repented of; but then it was too late to help it. Thus, at the motion of a d'-unken strumpet, was destroyed, by this drunken king, one of the finest palaces in the world. That this at Persepolis was such, the ruins of it sufficiently shew, which are still remaining even to this day,* at a place called Chehel-Mina •, near Shiras, in Persia. The name signifieth,^ in the Persian language, forty pillars, and the place is so called, be- cause such a number of pillars, as well as other stately ruins of this palace, are there still remaining even to this day. In the interim, Darius being fled to Ecbatai a in Media, there gathered together as many of his broken forces as fled that \\ay, and endeavoured^ all he could to raise others to add to them,' for the making up of another army. But Alex- ander having, by the beginning of the spring;, settled all his aflairs in Persia, made after him into Media. Of this Darius hiving received intelligence, left Ecbatana, with intentions to march into Bactru, there to strengthen and aug- ment his army with new recruits. But he had not gone far ere he altered hi? Durpose: for, fearing lest Alexander should overti*ke him before he could reach 1 Plutarch, ill Alpxamln. Cl. Ctirtius, lib. 5. Arriiui. lib. 3. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. Juslin.lib.il. 2 See the Travels of Herbert, Tbevenot, ami Chardiii. 3 Vide Oolii Notas ad Alfra{,'an^ii, p. 113. 1 Arrian. lib. U. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. Plutarch, in .Me.vandro. Curtiiis, lib. 5 380 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Bactria, he stopped his march, and resolved to stand the brunt of another battle, with the forces then about him, which amounted to about forty thousand men, horse and foot. But while he was preparing for it, Bessus governor of Bactria, and Nabarzanes another Persian nobleman, confederated with him in the treason,' seized the poor unfortunate prince, and making him their prisoner, put him in chains, and then, shutting him up in a close cart, fled with him toward Bactria, purposing, if Alexander pursued after them, to purchase their peace with him, by delivering him alive into his hands; but, if he did not pursue after them, then their intentions were to kill him, and seize his kingdom, and renew the war Alexander, on his coming to Ecbatana, found Darius was gone from thence about eight days before: however, he pursued hard after him for eleven days together, till he came to Rages, a city of Media, often mentioned in Tobit,'* and which was the place where Nebuchodonosor, king of Assyria, is said, in the book of Judith,- to have slain Arphaxad, king of Media. Here finding that it was in vain to pursue after Darius any farther, he stayed in this place several days for the refreshing of his army, and for the settling of the affairs of Media. Of which having made Oxidates, a noble Persian, governor,- he marched intc Parthia; where, having received intelligence of Darius's case, and what danger he was in from those traitors who had made him their prisoner, he put himself again upon the pursuit after him with part of his army, leaving the rest, under the command of Craterus, to follow after him; and, after several days' hard march, he at last came up with the traitors: whereon they would have per- suaded Darius to mount on horseback for his more speedy flight with them; but he refusing thus to do, they gave him several mortal wounds, and left him dying in his cart, Philistratus, one of Alexander's soldiers, found him in this con- dition; but he expired before Alexander himself came up to him. When he saw his corpse, he could not forbear shedding of tears at so melancholy a spec- tacle; and, having cast his cloak over it, he commanded it to be wrapped up therein, and carried to Sysigambis at Susa (where he had left her with the other captive ladies,) to be buried by her with a royal funeial, in the burying-place of the kings of Persia, and allowed the expenses necessary for it. And this was the end of this great king, and also of the empire over which he reigned, after it had lasted, from the first of Cyrus, two hundred and nine years. After this fact, Nabarzanes fled into Hyrcania, and Bessus into Bactria, and there he declared himself king by the name of Artaxerxes. Alexander^ was not stayed by the death of Darius from still pursuing after the traitor Bf^ssus; but, finding at length that he was gotten too far before him to be overtaken, he returned again into Parthia; and there havmg regulated his affairs in the army, as well ab in the province, he marched into Hyrcania, and received that country under his subjection. After that he subdued the Mardans, Arians, Drangians, Aracausians, and several other nations, over which he flew with victory, swifter than others can travel, often with his horse pursuing his enemies upon the spur Avhole days and nights, and sometimes making long rrjarc:ies for several days, one after the other, as once he did in pursuit of Darius, v( near forty miles a day, for eleven days together. So that, by the speed of his marches, he came upon his. enem}' before they were aware of him, and conquered them before they could be in a posture to resist him. Which ex- actly agreeth with the description given of him in the prophecies of Daniel some ages before; he being in them set forth under the similitude of a panther or' leopard, with four wings;"* for he was impetuous and fierce in his warlike expe- ditions, as a panther after his prey, and came on upon his enemies with that speed, as if he flew with a double"pair of wings. And to this purpose he is, m another place of those prophecies, compared to a he-goat,^ coming from the west with that swiftness upon the king of Media and Persia, that he seemed e-s 1 Chap. i. 14. iv. 1. o fliap. i. 15. 3 Plutarch, in Alexandro. Diodor. Sic. Arrian. Q. Ciiitius. et Justin, ibid. • 4Dan. vii.6. 5Ibid.viii. 5. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. ,J81 if his feet did not touch the ground. And his actions, as well in this comparison as in the former, fully verify the prophecy. While Alexander was among the Drangians,' a discovery was made of a con- spiracy formed against his life, of -which Philotas, the son of Parmenio, one of the chief commanders in his army, and principal confidants, being found to be the head, was put to death for it, with all his accomplices. And whether Alex- ander thouglit Parmenio to have been in the plot also, or feared his revenge for the death of his son, he sent to Ecbatana, where he had left him with part of his forces, to guard his treasure which he had there laid up, and caused him to be put to death also; which brought great envy upon him, this old commander having been his chief assistant in conducting his armies to most of those victo- ries which he had hitherto obtained. After this, Alexander, notwithstanding the approach of winter, marched still forward to the north, and subdued all in his way, carrying on his conquests as far as Mount Caucasus, where having built a city, which from his name he called also Alexandria, as he had several others, he there terminated his actions of this year. ■All. '3'29. Alex. 3.] — Early the next spring,- he made after Bessus; and having driven him out of Bactria, and settled that province under his obedience, he fol- lowed him into Sogdiana, the country now called Cowaresmia whither he was retired. This province being separated from Bactria by the River Oxus, wnich was large and deep, Bessus's chief confidence wa| in the impassableness of it: for, having taken away or destroyed all the shipping and boats that were to be found on it, he thought Alexander could not possibly get over it to pursue him any farther. But no difficulty being insurmountable to that conqueror, he found means, by stuffed skins, and such other devices, to get his army all over; where- on Bessus's followers, despairing of this case, seized his person, and delivered him bound to Alexander, who gave him into the hands of Oxatres, tlie brother of Darius, to be punished by him as he should think fit, for the treason he had been guilty of in murdering his king. For, after the death of Darius, this Oxatres surrendered himself to Alexander, who very kindly received him, and admitted him into the number of his friends, and treated him with favour as long as he lived. And Oxatres having thus gotten the traitor into his hands, made him die such a death as his treason deserved. Sogdiana breeding a great number of horses, Alexander came thither very opportunely for the remounting of his cavalry:^ for, by the quick and fatiguing marches which he had made, he had either killed or sp'^iled most of the horses of his army. But, notwithstanding, he had not such quick success in his con- quests here as in other provinces; for he had not now to do with the effeminate Persians and Babylonians, but with the Sogdlans, Dahans, and Massagets, va- liant and hardy people, who were not but with great difficulty to be subdued. And therefore this province found him a full year's work before he could bring it into thorough subjection to him. It lay upon the eastern side of the Caspian Sea, between the River Oxus on the south, and the River Orxantes on the north; the last of these Quintus Curtius and Arrian call Tanais, very erro- neously: for the River Tanais is much more to the west, and dischargeth itself not into the Caspian, but into the Euxine Sea, and is the same which we now call the Don. Pliny* takes notice of this mistake; and tells us it proceeded from Alexander's soldiers calling it so, and that in his time it was called Silys. The capital of this province was Maracanda, a great city of near ten miles in (. m- pass, and is the same which, being now called Samarcand, is tlie chief c'ty of the TJsbeck Tartars. While Alexander lay there with his army, toward the bc- j,inriiiig of winter, ** he basely, in a drunken fury, murdered Clitus, one of the Ifst of his friends, which afterward he condemned himself for, as much ^a every body else; for it was a very^ile action, and the greatest blot of his life. 1 Arrian. lib. 3. Plutarch, in Alexandro. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. (1. Curtius, lil). fi. c. 7—0, ^c. 2 Arrian. lib. 3. Plutarch, in Alexandro. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. CI. Curtius, lib. 7. 3 a. Curtius, lib. 8. Arrian. lib. 4. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. 4Lib.6.c. 16. 5 Plutarch, in .Mexandro. Q. Curtius, lib. 8. c. I. Arrian. lib. 4. 382 CONNEXION OF THE fflSTORY OF After he had thoroughly subdued the Sogdians, and reduced such of the Bac- tiians as had revolted from him, he took up his winter quarters in Nautaca, and there gave his array rest and refreshment for three months. An. 3'-S>. Alex. 4.] — While he lay there, being wholly at ease from the fa- tigues of war, he fell in love with Roxana,' the daughter of Oxyathres, a noble Persian, who was among the captive ladies in his camp, and took her to wife. She was the most beautiful woman of her time, and also one of the most wick- ed, as afterward by her actions, especially in the murder of Darius's daughters, she sufficiently made appear. That Alexander's marrying this lady might be made no objection against him among his Macedonians, he encouraged as many of their leaders and prime men as he found inclined that way to do the same, and take them Avives in like manner from among the Persian ladies. So that most of the time that he spent in these quarters was taken up in making such marriages, and in nuptial feastings upon them. But while these things were a doing in the camp, Alexander's head was .busy in projecting an expedition into India;^ his main incentive to this dangerous and unprofitable enterpize was all an excess of vanity and folly. He had read in the old Grecian fables, that Bacchus and Hercules, two of Jupiter's sons, had made this expedition into India, and he Avould fain, in emulation of them, do the 'same: for having been declared Jupiter's son as well as they, he would not be thought to come behind them in any thing, and he had flatterers enough about him to blow him up into this conceit. And about this time it was that he began to require divine honours to be paid to him, and commanded that all that were admitted to make addresses unto him should adore him, as formerly they had the Persian kings. All his old friends misliked this conduct in him, and none more than Callisthenes the philosopher. He was a kinsman of Aris- totle,* Alexander's master, and had been sent by him to attend this young con- queror on his first entering on the Persian Avar, and had accompanied him through all his expeditions ever since; and, being a very Avise and grave man, was thought the properest person to advise and directhim against those excesses which the heat of his youth might carry him into. And this being the whole end for Avhich he Avas sent to attend him, he could not but express his dislike of this folly. But Alexander not being able to bear the freedom with which he expressed himself in this matter, caused him to be put to death for it; which, nex! the death of Clitus, is that which, of all his other actions, bore hardest upon his reputation; and indeed, if duly estimated, it Avas by much the Avorst of the two; for he was in the heat of Avine, and also highly provoked by saucy and abusive language, Avhen he slew Clitus; but Callisthenes did put to deal*! deliberately and designedly, and for no other reason, but that he expressed his dislike of those follies Avhich he was sent on purpose by his instructions and ao- vice to correct in him. But before he Avent on his Indian expedition,* he very providentially took care to secure all in quiet behind him; and, therefore, while he lay in tbo?e quarters at Nautaca, he removed several of the governors of provinces Avho hjd oppressed their provincials, and remedied all the grievances they had been guilty of toward them, that none might have any just cause in his absence to create disturbances, or make any risings against him or his authority in any part of the empire. And the better to provide against all such, as Avell as foir the more successful carrj'ing on of the new war which he was going to enter upon, he caused thirty thousand young men of the sons of the principal men of the conquered countries to be listed for the augmenting of his army, that, having them Avith him in this expedition, they might be hostages with him foi the good behaviour of their relations, as well as useful to him in the war. 1 Q. Ciirtius, lib. 8. c. 4. Arrian. lib. 4. Pliitarcli. in Alcvandro. a Arrian. lib. 4. a. "ius, lib. 8. c. 5. !), 10. &c. Plutarch, in Alcxaridro. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. Justin lib \'i. c. 7. 3 Laertiu8 in Vita Aristotolis. Plutarcli. in Alcxandro et Sylla. 4 Arrian. lib. 4. Q. Curtius, lib. 8. c. S THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 393 On his marching into India,' his army, Avith these augmentations, consisted of one hundred and twenty thousand men, Grecians and Persians, bes ides fif- teen thousand which he left with Amyntas in Bactria, to keep those parts in quiet. Many nations on this side the River Indus were then reckoned to be of India; and in subduing of tliose was this whole year employed. Some of them he conquered by force," and some he received by submission. But none pleased him more than those that welcomed him as the third son of Jupiter that had come among them, meaning Bacchus and Hercules for the other two; so far was he intoxicated with the vain conceit of being thought the son of that imaginary god. Among those whom he subdued by force were the Assacans. But Cleophis, the queen of that nation, being a very beautiful woman, redeem- ed her kingdom, by prostituting her body to his lust; whereby she incurred that infamy and contempt among the Indians, that they afterward called her by no other name than that of the royal whore. By this concubinage she had a son, whom, from the name of his father, she called Alexander, who afterward reign- ed in those parts; and, if Paulus Venetus may be believed, there were in a cer- tain province of India, which he calls Balascai, kings of his race reigning there even to his time. An. 3'^. Alex. 5.] — Early the next spring,^ he passed the River Indus, over a bridge of boats there prepared for him, and from thence marched forward to the River Hydaspes. Between these two rivers lay the kingdom of Taxiles, who submitted to him. But beyond the Hydaspes lay the kingdom of Porus, a prince of great valour and power, who was there ready with a great army to impede his farther progress. This, on Alexander's passing that riv er, produced a fierce battle between them; wherein, after a fight of eight hours, Porus's army was vanquished with great slaughter, and he himself was taken prisoner; but the magnanimity and generosity of his carriage under his misfortune so took with Alexander, that he again restored to him his kingdom, and also aug- mented it. For, after this, having passed the River Acesinis, which terminated Porus's kingdom on the east, and taken all the territory that lay between that and the River Hydraotes, he added this also to Porus's dominions. After this, passing the Hydraotes, he marched to Hyphasis, and would gladly have passed that river also, and gone on to the Ganges. But his soldiers being weary of following him any farther in these expeditions of knight-errantry, forc^ him there to put an end to his farther progress. And therefore, having on th^anks of that river erected twelve large altars, for a memorial of his having been there, he marched back again to the Hydaspes; where having, at the place where he vanquished Porus, built a city which he called Nicsea, in memory of that victory, and another not far from it which he called Bucephala, in memory of his horse Bucephalus, which there died, he ordered his fleet to be drawn thither to him, for his passing down that river into the Indus, and the southern parts of India, purposing to carry on his arms and conquests that way as far as the ocean, and then to return to Babylon. An. •J'iG. Alex. 9.] — This fleet he had ordered to be prepared from his first passing the Indus, '' and it had been ever since making ready for him in the several places that he had appointed; which, when it was all brought together, amounted to two thousand vessels of all sorts. The chief command hereof he gave to Nearchus, and then, putting his army on board, he sailed down the Hydaspes into the Acesinis, and through that into the Indus: for the first of these fell into the second, and the second into the third. In his way, he had to do with two very valiant nations, the Oxidracians and the Mallians. The furmer of these inhabited where the Hydaspes fell into the Acesinis, and the olhpr where the Acesinis fell into the Indus. Both these he forced into a sub- r7>i-\sion, though not without great difficulty. And, while he besieged one of I Q. Curtius, lib. 8. c. 5. i Arrian. lib. 4. Q. Curtiua, lib. 8. Piularch. in Alexandro 3 riutarch. in Alexandre. Q. Curtius, lib. 8. Diodor. Sic. lib. 17. Arrian. lib. 5. 4 Arrian. lib. 6. Q. Curtius, lib. 9. Plutarch, in Alexandro. 384 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF the cities of the Mallians, he was very near losing his life: for, being the first that scaled the walls, he rashly leaped into the city, before any others were at hand to second him, and was there almost wounded to death, eie any of his followers could get in to rescue him. Thence he sailed down the Indus as far as the ocean, conquering all the nations in his way on both sides that river. When he had passed the mouth of the Indus into the Southerif Ocean, and had now carried his conquests to the utmost boundaries of the earth on that side, he reckoned that he had obtained all that he proposed; and therefore returning back to land, when he had given such orders as he thought fit for the settling of his Indian conquests, he sent Nearchus, with that part of the fleet which was fittest for the voyage, back again into the ocean, ordering him to sail that way to the Persian gulf, and up through that into the Euphrates, and meet him at Babylon; and then he with his army marched over land toward the same place. An. 325. Alex. 7.] — The way that he took in his march thither, was through the southern provinces of Persia;' a great part of which being a very barren country, and full of sandy deserts, he suffered very much in his passage through it, both for want of water as well as of provisions: and the scorching heat of the climate added to the calamity, which grew so great, that it destroyed a great part of his army. And to this it was chiefly owing, that he did not bring back above a fourth part of the number which he first carried with him into India. When he arrived in the province of Carmania (the same which, retain- ing its ancient name, is still called Kerman,) he marched in a bacchanahan procession for seven days together through that province, in way of triumph for his Indian conquests. For it seems he had heard that Bacchus returned in this manner after his like expedition into that country: for he much aflfected to imi- tate Bacchus and Hercules in all this expedition: and he did too much the for- mer of them, for a great part of his life, in that excessive drunkenness which he gave himself up unto. Nearchus, having coasted along all the countries, from the Indus to the mouth of the Persian gulf, arrived at the isle of Harmusia (now called Ormus;) where, hearing that Alexander was within five days' journey of that place, he went to him, and gave him an account of his voyage, and what discovBries and observa- tions ^ had made in it; with which, being exceedingly delighted, he sent him back E^^in to complete his first orders, and sail up the Euphrates to Babylon, as he had appointed. While Alexander was in Carmania, he had many complaints made to him of the oppressions exercised by his lieutenants, and other officers in the pro- vinces, during his absence in India; for, reckoning that he would never come back again, several of them did let themselves loose to rapine, tyranny, and all manner of cruelty and oppression. All these he caused to be put to death for the expiation of their crimes, and with them six hundred of the soldiers who had been their instruments in these enormities; and he exercised the same se- verity upon all other of his officers whom he after that found in the same abuses; which conduced very much to the making of his government acceptable to the conquered provinces. Being exceedingly pleased with the successful voyage that Nearchus had made with his fleet, and the account which he gave him of his discoveries, he re- solved upon more sea adventures, purposing no less, than from the Persian gulf to sail round Arabia and Africa, and return by the mouth of the straits (then called Hercules' s Pillars, now the Straits of Gibraltar,) into the Medv.erranean Sea; a voyage which had been several times attempted, and once performed at the command of Necho king of Egypt (of which an account hath been ?bove given.)" In order hereto, he sent his commands to his lieutenants In Mesopo- tamia and Syria, for a fleet of ships, fit for such an undertaking, to be /orthwith built at several places on the Euphrates, especially at Thapsacus, ordering g eat 1 Plutarchus, Curtius, Arrianus.ibid. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 38& quantities of timber to be cut down on Mount Libanus. and carried thither for this purpose. This shows the greatness of his designs; but this, as well as all others of them, were quashed by his death. On his coming to Pasargada, he was much offended at tlie violation which had been offered to the sepulchre of Cyrus, who was there buried. For since he was last there (which was a little after his taking of Perscpolis,) it had been broken up and robbed. The Magians who had the keeping of the sepulchre and several others were put to the torture, for the finding out of the authors of the sacrilege. But no discovery being made this way, at length by the malice of Bagoas, a beloved eunuch of Alexander's, the whole guilt was charged upon Orsines, the governor of the province. This Bagoas was a very beautiful young eunuch: Nabarzanes, who conspired with Bessus in the imprisonment, and af- terward in the death of Darius, presented him unto Alexander for the service of his lust; and by this present saved his life; so acceptable was the catamite to him for this vile use! and, by being thus frequently used by him, he grew so far into his favour, that he prevailed with him to sacrifice this noble Persian to his revenge, contrary to all honour, justice, and gratitude: for he had very much served him, especially in that province; for Phrasaortes, the governor of it, dying while Alexander was in India, and all things there being like to run into confu- sion upon it, for want of one to take care of the government, he took upon him to supply that defect, and preserved all things there in good order for the ser- vice of Alexander, to the time of his arrival thither; and, on his entering the province, met him in the most honourable manner, and being a person of great wealth, as well as of ancient nobility, he presented him and his followers with many noble presents, to the value of several thousands of talents. But when he presented the rest of Alexander's friends and favourites, taking no notice of Bagoas, and saying withal, when he was put in mind of him, " That he paid his respects to the king's friends, not to his catamites;" this so angered the eunuch^ that to work his revenge he contrived, that the whole charge of violating the se- pulchre of Cyrus was turned upon the governor of the province; and having suborned false witnesses to accuse him of this and many other enormities, Le prevailed with Alexander to put him to death, in the manner as I have said; which, considering the services he had done him, and the munificence with which he had received him on his entering into his province, is deservedly reckoned one of the basest of his actions. From Pasargada he marched to Persepolis, where he lamented his folly in having burned that city; from thence he passed on toward Susa. In his way thither he met Nearchus with his fleet: for Nearchus,' according to his orders, had sailed up the Persian gulf into the Euphrates; but there, hearing. Alexander was on his march toward Susa, he sailed back again to the mouth of the Pisiti- gris, and from thence up that river to a bridge which Alexander was to pass. And there the land array and the sea army meeting, they both joined together. For which Alexander offered sacrifices of thanksgiving to his gods, and made great rejoicings in his camp, and high honours were there given to Nearchus, for his successful conduct of the fleet, in bringing it safe through so many dan- gers to that place. When Alexander came. to Susa, where he had left all the captive ladies at his last being there, he took to wife Statira,° the eldest of Darius's daughters, and gave the younger, called Drypetis, to Hephcstion, his chief favourite, and at the same time married most of the rest of them, to the number of about one liun- dred, to others of his commanders and [)riHcipal followers. For they being the daughters of the prime nobility of the Persian empire, he hoped, by tliesc mar- riages, to make such a union of the Grecians and Persians together, as should 1 Airianiis di^ Rebus Indicis. 2 Dioifor. Sic. lib. 17. Pl'itarchiis in AUrx.Tiidro, et in Libro de Fortuna Alexiindii. Arriaii. lib. 7, where, by mistake, this dauzhtor of Darius is called Barsiiia. For Uarsina was the concubine, not the wile of Alexan- der, anil the daushter of Arlabaziis, not of Darius. She was first married to Memnon, and, alter his death being taken into the beil of Alexander, she had a son by him called Herrulea Vol. I.— 11) 3S6 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF render them both as one nation under his empire. And, for five days together, these nuptials were celebrated with great pomp and solemnity, and all manner of feasting and rejoicing. All the dowries of these ladies Alexander paid, and at the same time distributed great rewards to such of his followers as had best deserved of him in the wars, and paid the debts of all the soldiers of his army; which last article alone amounted to ten thousand talents, Justin and Arrian say twenty thousand. On these and other such occasions he expended vast sums, which were all supplied him out of the immense treasures of Darius: for out of them he laid up, in his treasury at Ecbatana only,' one hundred and ninety thousand talents, besides what he had at Babylon, and in ether treasuries through the . * pire. These nuptial solemnities being over, he left the main of his army under the conduct of Hephestion,^ and with the rest went on board the fleet, which he had caused to be brought up the Eulaeus (in Daniel called the Ular^) on which Susa stood, and sailed down that river into the Persian gulf, and from thence passed up the Tigris to the city Opis, where Hephestion met him with the rest of the army. On his coming to that place, he caused it to be proclaimed through the whole army,'* that all those Macedonians, who by reason of their age, or the wounds they had received in the wars, or other infirmities, found themselves unable any longer to bear the fatigues of the camp, should have full liberty to return into Greece, declaring his intentions to dismiss them bountifully, and to cause them with honour and safety to be conveyed to their own homes. This he intended as a kindness to them; but, it being taken by another handle, as if he were weary of his Macedonians, and dis- missed them only to make room for the new recruits which he had lately raised out of the conquered countries, to be taken into the army in their stead, they fell into a mutiny, and desired all to be dismissed; telling him, that since he despised his soldiers, by whom he had gained all his victories, he and his father Hammon might alone wage his wars for the future; they would serve him no longer. Thus his folly in challenging that imaginary god for his father, how much soever he valued himself upon it, was made his reproach on this, as well as on all other occasions by every body else. This mutinous humour, though it broke not out till on this occasion, had been long a breeding among them. They disliked his affecting the Persian manners and habit, his marrying a Per- sian lady, and his causing so many of his followers to do the same. But that which disgusted them most was, his ingrafting the new recruits which he made out of the conquered countries into the Macedonian militia, and the advancing of many Persians to places of honour and trust, both in the army and in the provinces, equally with the Macedonians: for he having conquered by them alone, they thought they alone ought to reign with him, and engross all his fa- vours, and therefore were grievously discontented with all the methods which he took for the uniting of the Persians with them: and these discontents being heightened by every step which 'he made for the effecting of this union, at length broke out into a mutiny on the occasion mentioned. Whereon he having j)unished some of them, and this being of no effect to reduce the rest, he re- tired into his tent, and there shut himself up for two days; after that, oirthe third. Tie called together his Asiatic soldiers, excluding the Macedonians, and spoke very kindly to them, assured them of his favour, and treated them as if he intended for the future wholly to depend upon them, choosing his guards out of them, and advancing several of them to places of honour and trust, with- out taking any farther notice of the mutineers; which soon brought them to a better temper; for, seeing themselves thus kept at a distance, and Avholly ne- glected, and excluded the favours they formerly enjoyed, they came to the door ■of his tent with tears of repentance, and there continued for two days in hura- 1 Justin, lib. 12. c. 1. This amounts to above thirty-five millionsand a half of our money, according to tha lowest calculation; but, according to Dr. Bernard's computation, it comes to near forty millions. 2 Arrian. lib. 7. 3 Chap. viii. 2. 10. 4 Plutarcb. in Ale.\a«dro. .\rrian lib. 7. i in Kumi^mii-. DiimI. Sk. lib. IB. 396 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF fortress, and with the five hundred men that bore the siege with him, marched into Cappadocia, and there got together of his old soldiers about two thousand more, and made all other preparations for the war which he knew would be again renewed against him. In the interim,' the defection of Antigonus from the interest of the kings, and setting up for himself, being notorious, a commission was sent to Eumenes, in the name of the kings, from Polyspherchon, their guardian, constituting him captain-general of all the Lesser Asia, with orders to Teutamus and Antigenes, commanders of the Argyraspides, to join with him, and, under his command, to make war against Antigonus. And those who had the keeping of the king's treasury were conftnanded every where to supply him with money for this war. And letters were sent every where from Olympias to the same purpose. Here- on Eumenes set himself with vigour to augment his forces with new recruits, and make all other preparations which might enable him successfully to exe- cute all the orders he had received. But, before he could get together an army sufficient for it, Menander, one of Antigonus's captains, coming upon him into Cappadocia, with a great army, he was forced to march thence in haste with only three thousand men that he had then about him. But having, by long marches, gotten over Mount Taurus into the country of Cilicia, he was there met by the Argyraspides, who, according to the orders received from the kings, joined with him, they being in number about three thousand men. These were the remainder of the old soldiers of Alexander, by whom he had won all his victories; and he having given them," when they marched with him into India, shields plated over with silver, as a mark of special honour to them, from hence they were called the Argyraspides, i. e. the silver-shielded (for so that name signified in the Greek language.) And they were eminent, above all of their time, for valour and skill in war. But the year being then spent, Eumenes could do no more at that time than enter into winter-quarters Avith them in that country. An. 318. Philip 6.] — While he lay there, ^ he sent his emissaries into aU parts to raise him more forces; who, being plentifully supplied with money, executed their commission so successfully, that in the ensuing spring he took the field with an army of twenty thousand men, horse and foot, which did put all his enemies into no small fear of him. And therefore, Ptolemy, for the crushing of him, came with a fleet upon the coasts of Cilicia, and made all manner of attempts to draw off the Argyraspides from him; and Antigonus endeavoured the same by several emissaries sent into Eumenes' camp for this purpose. But both miscarried herein: for Eumenes carried himself with that benignity and affability to all that were with him, and conducted all his affairs with so much prudence, that he engaged the hearts of all his soldiers to him Avith so strong a link of affection and confidence, that not a man of all his army could be induced to desert him. And therefore, having his army thus firmly fixed to him,* he marched with them into Syria and Phoenicia, to dispossess Ptolemy of these provinces, which, against all right, he had violently seized to himself. His intention hereby'was to open a secure correspondence between him and Polysperchon by sea; for, could he have gotten the naval strength of the Phcenicians into his power, this, in conjunction with the fleet of Polysperchon, would have made them absolute masters of the seas, and they might then have sent and received succours to and from each other, according as their affairs should require: and had this de- sign succeeded, they must have carried all before them. But the fleet of Poly- sperchon being, through the folly of CHtus, who commanded it, all broken and destroyed by Antigonus, this baffled the whole project. For Antigonus, imme- diately on the gaining of this victory, put himself upon the march Avith a great army to find out Eumenes, and fall upon him; of Avhich Eumenes haA-ing re 1 Dind. Pint, et Corn. Nepos. in Eiirnenp. 2 Justin, lib. 10. c. 7. duintus Ciirtius. lib. 8. c. 5. 3 Diod. Sic. lib. 18. Plutarch, et Corn. Nepos in Kunieno. 4 Diodor. Sic. lib. 18. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 397 ceived intelligence, and finding himself •ot strong enough to encounter so great a force as Antigonus was bringing against him, he durst not stay his coming: but forthwith withdrew out of Phcenicia, and marching through Ccele-Syria passed the Euphrates, and wintered at Carrhaj and Mesopotamia. This was the ancient Charan,' or Haran of the holy scriptures, where Abraham dwelt before he came into the land of Canaan, and where, after that Nahor, the brother of Abraham, and his posterity after him, had their habitation for several genera- tions.* And it was, in the histories of after-ages, rendered famous for the great battle there fought between the Romans and the Parthians,^ wherein the former received that signal overthrow, in which Crassus, and most of their army under his command, were cut in pieces. The Turks now call it Harran,^ by the old name; and it was, in late ages, famous for being the prime seat of the Sabians,' a noted sect in the east, of which I have spoken above. Hence those of this sect were called Harranites, as well as Sabians, in those parts. An. 317. Philip 7.] — Eumenes, while he lay at Carrhge," sent to Pithon, go- vernor of Media, and Seleucus, governor of Babylon, to join with him, for the aiding of the kings against Antigonus, and caused the orders of the kings for this purpose to be communicated to them. Their answer hereto was, that they should be very ready to give all aid to the kings, but would have nothing to do with him who had been declared a public enemy by the Macedonians. But the truth of the matter was, they feared the great genius of Eumenes: for the intention of most of Alexander's commanders, who, after his death, had di- vided the governments and provinces of his empire among them, was to set up for themselves, and make themselves sovereigns, each in the country which he had seized; and it was with a view to this, that on the death of Alexander, they did set up an idiot and an infant to have the names of sovereigns after him, that, under so weak a government^ they might the better ripen their designs for the usurpations they 'intended; and these measures they thought would be broken, if Eumenes got the ascendant; and therefore', all of them that were for these measures were against him. But, whether his purpose was to advance himself to the sovereignty, or preserve it to the family of Alexander, is uncer- tain. His professions always were for the family of Alexander, and whatevei his secret intentions might be, none of his actions made any discovery to the contrary. But thus much is certain, that as he was the wisest and the most valiant of all Alexander's captains, so was he the most steady and faithful to all his obligations, having never falsified his faith in any one particular wherein he had engaged it; though he himself perished for want of it in o'.hers, as will be hereafter related. From Carrhfe' Eumenes marched, in the beginning of the spring, toward Babylon; in which march he had like to have lost all his army, by a stratagem of Seleucus upon him. For he having encamped on a plain near the Euphrates, Seleucus, by cutting the banks of the river, overflooded the place where he lay. But Eumenes, having immediately drawn off his army to an adjoining emi- nence, thereby saved them from the present danger, and the next day after, having found out a way to drain off the overflowings, he marched off without receiving any great inconvenience from it: whereon Seleucus played truce with them, and permitted him safely to pass through his province to Susa, where he put his army into quarters of refreshment, and from thence sent mes- sengers to all the governors of the upper provinces of Asia to call them to his assistance. He had before transmitted to them letters from the kings, which commanded them to join him for the support of the royal interest, and now he sent to let them know where he was, and to press upon them speedy execution of the royal command. And his messengers found them all together, they having lately joined in a war against Pithon, governor of Media, which they had just then finished. For Pithon, playing the same game in those provinces 1 Gen. xi. ;U, 'Xi. xii. 4. xxix. 4. 2 Pliiliircli. in Crasso. Appian. in Parttiicis. Sliabo, lit). 16. p. 747. 3 Vide Golii Notas ad AlfraganiTin, p. 249,250. 4 Dioilor. Sic. lib. 19. r. Ibid. ^98 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF of the Upper Asia that Antigonus did in the Lower, had put Philotas to death to seize his province, and intended to have proceeded in the same manner with the rest, till he should have usurped all to himself; which being discerned, they all joined, under the command of Peucestes, governor of the province of Per- sia, in a common war against him; in which having vanquished him in battle, they drove him out of Media, and forced him to fly to Babylon, to crave of Seleucus the protection of his life. And they were still encamped togethei afler this victory, when Eumenes' messengers came unto them; whereon they immediately marched to Susa, and there joined him with all their forces, which consisted of about twenty-five thousand men, horse and foot. This reinforce- ment made him more than a match for Antigonus, who was then on his march after him; but the year being far advanced before he could reach the Tigris, he was forced to take up his wintei'-quarters in Mesopotamia, where Seleucus and Pithon, who were then of his party, joining him, they there concerted together the operations of the next campaign. In the interim a great change happened in Macedonia;' for Olympias, the mothei of Alexander, having formerly fled out of Macedonia into Epirus, with Alexander her grandson, and Roxana his mother, for fear of Antipater, now after his death was again returned, and, having gotten the power of the king- dom into her hands, put Aridaeus, the nominal king (whom they call Philip,) to death, with Eurydice his wife, after he had borne the title of king six years and seven months; and with him she slew also Nicanor, the brother of Cassan- ler, and an hundred more of his principal friends and adherents: which crueltj' was retailed upon her the next year after; for then Cassander, coming upon her with an army, besieged her in Pydna, and, having forced her to surrender, first '-hut her up in prison, and afterward caused her to be there put to death. After *he cutting off of Aridteus, Alexander, the son of Roxana, alone bore the title of king, till at length he was also in like manner cut off" by the treachery of those who usurped his father's empire. But almost all the time he bore this title alone, he bore it in a jail: for Cassander, after he had taken Pydna, shut up him and his mother in the castle of Amphipolis, till at length he murdered them both, to make way for himself to be king of Macedon; as will hereafter, in its proper place, be more fully related. .An. 316. .Alex. JEgus 1.] — Antigonus, in the beginning of the spring," march ed to Babylon, where, having joined the forces which Pithon and Seleucus had there got ready for him, he passed the Tigris to find out Eumenes; and, on the other hand, Eumenes was not wanting to put himself in a posture to en- counter him, being now superior to him in the number of his forces, and much more so in the wisdom and sagacity of his conduct: not that the other was de- fective herein; for, next Eumenes, he was certainly the best general and the wisest politician of his time. But the great disadvantage which Eumenes lay un- der, was, he commanded a volunteer army, it being made up of the forces brought him by the several governors of provinces, who had joined him, and every one of these would have the general command; and Eumenes, not being a Mace- donian, but a Thracian by birth, there was not one of them but thought himself, for this reason, preferable before him. To master this difficulty, he pretended that Alexander'had appeared to him in a dream, and showed him a royal pa- vilion richly furnished with a throne in it, and told him, that, if they would sit in council there, he himself would be present to prosper all their consultations and undertakings upon which they should enter in his name; and, having wrought the superstition which they had for Alexander into a belief of this, he caused such a pavilion and throne to be erected as he pretended to have seen in his dream; and, placing a crown and sceptre in the throne, he prevailed with them there to meet in council, and consult together in common, under the pre- sidency of Alexander, in the same manner as when he was alive, without own- ing any other superior; which quelled all farther strife about this matter: for I DiodnriisSiculils lib. 19. Justin, lib. 14. 2 Diodor. Sic. lib. I!l. I'Ifttarcli. et Corn N.pi's in Kiiiiiene THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 399 Hereby a priority was yielded to none, and all pretences to it being still kept alive, were reserved to the opportunities which the future events of their affairs might give to lay claim thereto. However, the army had that confidence in the great abilities of Eumenes, that, in time of battle, and in all cases of dan- ger, he was always called to the supreme command, and the soldiers would not fight till they saw him in it. And, by the wisdom of his management, he brought it to pass in all other cases, that though in outward show he seemed tc waive all superiority, yet in reality he had it, and all things were ordered ac- cording to his directions. And the royal command to all the keepers of the public treasuries being to give out unto Eumenes all such sums as he should think fitting to require, this command of the purse gave him the command of all things else; for hereby he was enabled constantly to pay his army, and also to give gratuities to the chief leaders among them; which had no small influ- ence to engage them to him. And in this posture stood the affairs of both par- ties, when this years' war was begun, which was carried on with great vigour on both sides; and all Media and Persia became the field of it: for they ranged these countries all over with marches and counter-marches upon each other, and all manner of stratagems and trials of military skill were put in practice on both sides. But Eumenes having a genius much superior in all such matters, he did thereby, notwithstanding the disadvantages he lay under from a muti- nous and ungovernable army, make the campaign end in his favour: for he had worsted Antigonus in two encounters, in which he had slain and taken a great number of his men; and, when winter approached, he secvired the best quar- ters for himself in the province of Gabiena, and forced Antigonus to march northward, to seek for his in the country of Media, at the distance of twenty- five day's march from him. ./?«. 315. Jllex. JEgus 2.] — But the licentiousness of Eumenes' soldiers being such,' that they would not be kept together, but, for the sake of a more luxuri- ous plenty, scattered themselves over the province, and quartered at so great a distance from each other, as would require several days for them again to em- body; Antigonus, on his having an account hereof, took a march toward him in the middle of winter, reckoning to be upon him before he should be able to get his army together, and thereby gain an absolute victory over him. But Eu- menes, who was never wanting in any precautions necessary for his security, had his spies and scouts so well }*laced, and so well furnished with dromeda- ries, the swiftests of beasts, to give him intelligence, that he had notice of this march of Antigonus some days before he could arrive, and had time to defeat it by a stratagem, which saved the army, when all the other commanders gave it for lost: for getting up upon those mountains which lay toward the enemy, with such forces a^ were nearest at hand, he there caused them, the next night, to kindle fires in such manner as might represent the encampment of an army; which being seen by Antigonus's scouts at a great distance, and speedily noti- fied to him, tnis made him believe that Eumenes was there with all his army ready to encounter him; and, therefore, not thinkiflg it proper to engage his men, as then fatigued and tired out by a long march, with a fresh army, he stopped so long to refresh them, that Eumenes had gotton all his forces together before he could come up with him, and then he found he came too late to put his designs in execution. However, not long after, this brought on a battle be- tween them, wherein Eumenes got the victory; which would have proved de- cisive in his favour, but that he lost all the fruits of it, and himself too, by the treachery of his own men. For the battle being fought in a sandy field, the feet of the mcii and horses in the engagement raised such a dust, as involved all in a cloud, so that there was no seeing of any thing at the least distance: of which Antigonus taking the advantage, sent out a party of horse, that seized and carried off all the baggage of Eumenes' army, before they could be per- ceived; whereby he gained the main point though he lost the victory. For 1 Diudor. Sic. Plutarcli. ct Com. Nepos in Euincnc. ^0 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Eurnenes' soldiers, when returned from the pursuit of the enemy, finding then camp taken, and all their baggage, with their wives and children carried off, in- stead of using their swords against the enemy again to recover them, turned all their rage upon their general; and, therefore, having seized and bound him, sold him to Antigonus, to redeem what they had lost, and then went all over to him; which absolutely determined the war for the interest of Antigonus; for imme- diately hereon he became master of all Asia, from the Hellespont to the River Indus. Eumenes, being thus fallen into his hands, he was for some time in a doubt how to dispose of him, he having been formerly his intimate friend, while they both served together under Alexander: the remembrance hereof did at hrst put the affection he had for him into a struggle wdth his interest for the saving of his life; and Demetrius his son became an earnest solicitor for him, being very desirous, out of the generosity of his temper, that so gallant a man should be kept alive. But at length, reflecting on his immoveable fidelity to Alexander's family, how" dangerous an antagonist he had in him on this account, and how able he was to disturb all his affairs, should he again get loose from him, he durst not trust him with life, and therefore ordered him to be put to death in prison: and thus perished the wisest and the gallantest man of the age in which he lived. He had not indeed the fortune of Alexander, but in every thing else far exceeded him: for he was truly valiant without rashness, and wise without timidity, readily foreseeing all advantages that offered, and boldly exe- cuting all that were feasible; so that he never failed of any thing that he under- took, but when disappointed by the treachery of his own men. By this means he lost the battle which he fought with Antigonus in Cappadocia; and by this means only was it that he w^as at last undone in Gabiena. After his death An- tigonus, with all his army, in the solemnist manner, attended his funeral-pile, and showed him the greatest honour that could be done him after his death, and sent his bones and ashes in a sumptuous urn of silver to his wife and chil- dren in Cappadocia. But this could make no amends for the taking away of his life. However, it showed, that, even in the opinion of the worst of his enemies, he was a person of that eminent merit as deserved a much better fate. Antigonus,' now looking on the whole empire of Asia as his own, for the bet- ter securing of it to him, made a reform through all the eastern provinces, put- ting out all such governors as he distrusted, and placing others, of whom he had greater confidence, in their stead, and such as he thought dangerous he cut off. Of this number was Pithon, governor of JNIedia, and Antigonus, general of the Argyraspides: and he had marked out Seleucus, governor of Babylon, for the same destruction; but he, being aware of it, fled into Egypt, and there, under the protection of Ptolemy, saved his life. And as to the Argyraspides, who were those that betrayed Eumenes, he sent them into Arachosia, the remotest pro- vince of the empire, giving it in charge to Sibertius, the governor of it, by all ways and means, to cause them there to be all consumed and destroyed, so that not a man of them might again return into Greece. And this he did out of a just abhorrence of the treachery which they had been guilty of toward their general, though he himself had the fruit of it. In the interim, Seleucus being got safe into Egypt," he so effectually repre- sented to Ptolemy the formidable power of Antigonus, as he also did to Lysi- machus and Cassander, by messengers sent to them for this purpose, and made them so sensible of the danger they were in from it, that he drew them all three into a league against him. Antigonus being aware that Seleucus, on his flight, might endeavour to engage those princes into measures prejudicial to his interest, sent to each of them ambassadors to renew his friendship with them. But finding by their answers, and the high demands which they made, that no- thing but a war was to be expected from them, he hastened out of the east into Cilicia; and, having there taken care for the recruiting and re-enforcing his 1 Diodor. Sic. lih. 10. Pliitarcli. in Demot. Appian. in Syriacis. 2 Diodor. et Appian. ibid. Justin, lib. l.j. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 401 army, and ordered all things in the provinces of Lesser Asia, as best suited with his interest, he marched thence into Syria and Phcenicia. An. 314. Alex. ALgas 3.] — His intentions,' in entering into these provinces, were to dispossess Ptolemy of them, and making himself master of their naval force; for, finding that a dangerous war was coming upon him from the confede- rated princes, and judging aright that, without making himself master of the seas, there was no managing of it with success against them, he found it neces- sary to have the Phoenician ports and shipping at his command: but he came too late for the latter of them, Ptolemy having carried away all the Phoenician shipping into Egypt before his arrival: neither did he easily make himself mas- ter of the ports; for Tyre, Joppa, and Gaza, held out against him. The two lat-. ter he soon reduced, but Tyre endured a siege of fifteen months before it could be brought to yield to him. However, having all the other ports of Syria and Fhoenicia in his power, he immediately set himself to the building of a fleet of ships in them, cutting down vast quantities of timber from Mount Libanus, and causing them to be carried to the several ports where the ships were building; in which work several thousands of hands were employed: and by this means- he soon equipped such a number of ships, as did, with those sent him from Cyprus, Rhodes, and other confederated places, make up a fleet, which soon gave him the mastery of the seas. That which chiefly edged him on with so' much speed to provide himself with this fleet, was an aifront offered him by Se- leucus: for while he lay encamped near Tyre, on the sea-shore, Seleucus came thither with one hundred sail of Ptolemy's fleet, and Antigonus, not having any shipping to encounter him, he passed by the coast where he was encamped, in contempt of him, within the sight of all his army; which very much disheart- ening his men, and raising a mean opinion of his power in such of his allies as were then present with him, for the remedy hereof, he called them all together, and did let them know, that even that very summer he would be on those seas with a fleet of five hundred sail, which no power of the enemy should be able to withstand; and accordingly he made his word good before the end of the year. An. 313. Alex. JEgus 4.] — But Antigonus finding that, while he was intent upon these affairs in Phoenicia, Cassander grew upon him in the Lesser Asia,' he marched thither with one part of his army, and left Demetrius, his son (then a young man, not exceeding the twenty-second year of his age,) with the other part, to defend Syria and Phoenicia against Ptolemy. By this time Tyre was reduced to great extremities: for Antigonus's fleet, being now set to sea, barred^ all provisions from being carried to them; which soon brought them to a neces- sity of surrendering. However, they obtained terms for the garrison of Ptole- my to march safely thence with all their effects, and for the inhabitants to re-- tain theirs without any damage. For Andronicus, who then commanded at the siege of Antigonus, was glad on any terms to gain so important a place, espe- cially after being tired out with so long a siege; for it lasted (as I have already said) fifteen months. It was but nineteen years before that Alexander had de- stroyed this city in such a manner, as it might seem to require the length of ages for it again to recover itself; yet in so short a time it grew up again into a condition of enduring this siege for more than double the time of that of Alex- ander's. This shows the great advantage of trade: for this city being the grand ^ mart, where most of the tmde both of the east and west did then centre, by vir- tue hereof it was, that it so soon revived to its pristine vigour. Antigonus,^ on his coming into Lesser Asia, soon reduced the growing power of Cassander, and forced him to very mean terms of accommodation; but after . he had made them, he repented of the agreement, and would not stand to it, but sent to Ptolemy and Seleucus for assistance, and went on with the war; which detained Antigonus longer in those parts than he intended, and, in the interim, gave Ptolemy the opportunity of gaining great advantages against nim 'n the east. 1 Dioiliir. Sic. lit). 19. a Ibid. Plut. in Uemet. Appian. in Syriacis. 3 Diod. Sic. lib. 19. Vol. L— 51 402 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF An. 312. Alex. JEgus 5.] — For having with his fleet sailed to Cyprus,' he re- duced most of that island to him, and from thence made a descent, first upon the Upper Syria, and next upon Cilicia; where having taken great spoils, and many captives, he returned with them into Egypt; and there having, by the ad- vice of Seleucus, formed a design for the recovery of Phoenicia and Syria, he marched thither with a great army. On his coming to Gaza, he there found Demetrius ready to obstruct his farther progress. This brought on a fierce bat- tle between them; in which Ptolemy gained the victory, having slain five thou- sand of Demetrius's men, and taken eight thousand captive; which forced De- metjius to retreat, first to Azotus, and from thence to Tripoly, a city of Phceni- cia, as far back as the confines of the Upper Sysia, and quit all Phcenicia, Pales- tine, and CcEle-Syria, to the victor. But, before he left Azotus, having sent to desire leave to bury the dead, Ptolemy not only granted him this, but sent him also all his equipage, tents, and furniture, with all his friends, family, and ser vants, without any ransom; which kindness Demetrius had the opportunity of returning, when, awhile after he got the like advantage of Ptolemy. All the other captives lie sent into Egypt, to be there employed in his service on board his fleet; and then marching forward, had all the sea-coast of Phoenicia forth- with surrendered to him, excepting only Tyre; for Andronicus, who had lately talien that city after the long siege I have mentioned, having then the govern- ment of it, held it out for some time. But at length the garrison soldiers faUing into a mutiny against him, delivered the place to Ptolemy, and him Avith it. After these successes, Seleucus," having obtained of Ptolemy one thousand foot, and three hundred horse, marched eastward with them to recover Babylon. With so small a force did he undertake so great an enterprise, and yet succeed- ed in it. On his coming to Carrhae in Mesopotamia, partly by persuasion, and partly by force, he brought all the Macedonians that were there in garrison to join with him. And as soon as he drew near to Babylon, great numbers of the inhabitants of that province flocked to him: for remembering his mild govern- ment, and disliking the severity of Antigonus, they were glad of his return, and desirous to see him reinstated in his former command over them; and therefore, on his approach to the city, he found the gates open to him, and he was re- ceived into the place with the general acclamation of the people. Whereon those who were of the party of Antigonus retired into the castle; but Seleucus, having now the possession of the city, and all the people on his side, soon made himself master of this fortress; and with it again received his children, friends, and servants, whom, on his flight into Egypt, Antigonus had there shut up in prison; and then applied himself to get together such an army as might enable him to keep what he had gotten; for he had not long been in possession of this city, ere Nicanor (who was governor of Media for Antigonus) put himself upon the march with an army to drive them thence. Seleucus, on his having re- ceived intelligence of it, passed the Tigris to meet him, and, having gotten him at a disadvantage, stormed his camp in the night, and put his whole army to the rout; whereon Nicanor, with some few of his friends, fled through the de- serts to Antigonus, and all his forces that survived the rout, part through dislike of Antigonus, and part through fear of the conqueror, joined with him. Where- by having gotten a great army under him, he seized Media, Susiana, and other neighbouring provinces and places, and thereby firmly fixed his interest and his power in those parts, which he daily improved by the clemency of his go- •vernment, and the justice, equity, and humanity, which he practised toward all that were under it; and by these means, from so low a beginning as I have mentioned, he grew up at length to be the greatest of all Alexander'.** successors. From this retaking of Babylon by Seleuces,' began the famous era of the 1 Diod.Sic. lib. 19. Plutarch in Demetrio. Justin, lib. 15. c. 1. Hecatsus Abderit.i apud Josephiim contra Apionem, lib. 1. 2 Diodor. Sic. lib. 19. Appian. in Syriacis 3 Vide Scaliger. Petaviiim, Ca'visium, aliosque Chronolog. de hsc sra. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. , 403 SeleucidjB, made use of all over the east, by heathens, Jews, Christians, and Mahometans. It is called by the Jews the era of contracts,^ because, after they fell under the government of the Syro-Macedonian kings, they were forced to use it in all their contracts, and other instruments of civil affairs; and it after- ward grew so much in use among them, that, till a thousand years after Christ, they had no other way whereby to compute their time, but this era of contracts only; for it was not till then that they began to reckon by the years from the creation of the world. As long as they continued in the east, they continued in the eastern usage of computing by the era of contracts (as they called it;) but when, about the year of our Lord 1040, they were driven out of the east, and forced to remove into these western parts, and here settled in Spain, France, England, and Germany, they learned from some of the Christian chronologert of these countries to compute by the years from the creation. The first year of this era, according to their reckoning, falls in the year of the Julian period, 953, and takes its beginning from the autumnal equinox of that year. But the true year of the creation of the world, according to Scaliger's computation, was? a hundred and eighty-nine years, and, according to others, two hundred and forty-nine years higher up than where this era of the Jews placeth it. How- ever, the era of contracts is not at this time out of use among those people; fat they continue still to reckon by it, as well as by the other. The Arabs call if Taric Dilcamain, i. e. The Era of the Two-horned. The reason of this name some deduce from Alexander,*^ who is, in the Alcoran and other Arabic books, frequently called The two-horned. And he is often found with two horns on his coins. This most likely proceeded from the fond vanity which he had of being thought the son of Jupiter Hammon; for that god of the heathens being usuallj represented with two ram's horns on his head, Alexander might cause himself to be so represented too, the better to make the fiction pass, that he was his sont But this era hath no relation to Alexander, although it hath been by some ig- norantly derived from him, and also called by his name, The era of Alexander: for Alexander was dead twelve years before it began, and its commencement only was from the recovery of Babylon by Seleucus. And therefore it is most * proper to deduce the origin of this Arabic name, Tanc Dilcamain, from Seleo^ cus: and Appian gives us in him a sufficient reason for it;^ for he tells us, that Seleucus being a person of that great strength, that laying hold of a bull by the horn, he could stop him in his full career, the statuaries for this reason usually made his statues with two bull's horns on his head. And therefore, it is most likely that he, and not Alexander, was first meant by the two-homed in the Arabic name of this era: for it was from him, and not from Alexander, that if had its origin. It is, in the books of the Maccabees,'' called The era of the kimf- dom of the Greeks, and they both of them compute by it. But, whereas the first book of the Maccabees begins the years of this era from the spring, the second begins them from the autumn following, and so did the Syrians, Arabs, and Jews, and all others that anciently did, or now do use, this era, excepting- the Chaldeans. For they, not reckoning Seleucus to be thoroughly settled in the possession of Babylon, till the spring in which Demetrius made that retreat from thence, which we shall speak of in the next year following, they began not this era till from that spring, and for the same reason, reckoned the begin- ning of all the years of it from that season also. So that, whereas all other nations that computed by this era, began it from the autumn of the year before Christ 312, it had not its commencement among the Chaldeans till from the spring of the year next after following. In the interim,^ Ptolemy having again made himself master of all Phoenicia, Judea, and Coele-Syria, sent Cilles, one of his generals, to take possession of the 1 Vide Vorstii Zcinacli David, p. 61. et Dibsertationem R. Azariae apud eundem in Observationibufl sd !fie- mach David, p. 217, 218, &c. 2 Vide Golii Nntas ad Alt'racanum, p. 57, 58. et Alfraganum ipsum, c. 1. s. De JErin. p 6 3 In Syriaciseditionis TolliantR Anistelodami, p. 201. 4 1 Maccab. i. 10. 5 Diodor lib 1!). Plutarch, in Dcmetrio. 404 ' CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF Upper Syria also, and drive Demetrius thence, who was then retreated thither. But Cilles, out of contempt of the baffled enemy he had to deal with, making his encampments negligently and loosely, Demetrius, on his having an account hereof from his spies, by a long and speedy march came upon him before he was aware, and, surprising him in the night, got an absolute victory over him, taking his camp, and making him and seven thousand of his men prisoners of war; which equalling the defeat he had before received at Gaza, again balanced Che matter between him and Ptolemy; and also put it in the power of Deme- trius (for the sake of which he most valued this victory) to make a return to Ptolemy of the kindness he had before received from him: for, after this victo- ry, he sent back unto him Cilles, and all his friends, without ransom, in the same manner as Ptolemy had before sent back to him all his friends after the victory which he had over him at Gaza. Antigonus,' receiving an account at Celenje, in Phrygia (where he then re sided,) of this victory of his son's over Cilles, hastened thence into Syria, to Erosecute there the advantages of it; and having passed Mount Taurus, joined is son in the Upper Syria: whereon Ptolemy, finding himself not strong enough to encounter the joint forces of the father and son together, dismantled Ace, Joppa, Samaria, and Gaza, and retreated again into Egypt, carrying with him most of the riches and a great number of the inhabitants of the country. Whereon all Phoenicia, Judea, and Ccele-Syria, returned again under the power of Antigonus. The inhabitants of those countries,* whom Ptolemy carried with him into Egypt on his retreat, followed him thither rather voluntarily, and out of free choice, than by compulsion; for he being a person of a very benign temper, and having always shown great clemency and humanity to all his government, this so far captivated the hearts of those people to him, that they rather chose to follow him into a strange country, than tarry the coming of Antagonus into their own (from whom they expected a contrary treatment;) and that especially since they had terms of great advantage offered them by Ptolemy to invite ^(hem to this removal: for his mind being then much set upon making of Alex- andria to be the capital of Egypt, was glad of all that he could get to come thither to inhabit the place, and offered great privileges and immunities to draw Jiem thither. And here Ptolemy planted all those that followed him in this /etreat; among whom were a great number of the Jews. Alexander had plant- ed several of that nation there before;* and Ptolemy after his first irruption into Judea, had brought from thence many more of them thither, where they en- joyed the benefit of a plentiful country, a secure protection, and many other advantages. The report whereof coming into Judea, excited in many others there a desire to follow them; and accordingly many did so on this occasion; for Alexander had, on his first building this city, given them, for their encour- agement to plant there, the same privileges and immunities with the Macedo- nians; and Ptolemy had continued the same to them. By which means the Jewish quarters in that city increased to the number of several thousands of families; and many Samaritans,'* as well as Jews, upon the like encouragement, became inhabitants of this place, and there multiplied to a great number. . Among those that followed Ptolemy into Egypt on this occasion, one was Hezekias,^ a person of eminent note among that people, and one of their chief priests. Hecatteus, the historian, being then with Ptolemy, makes particular mention of him, as a person of great wisdom and prudence, a powerful speaker, and one that thoroughly understood the world, being then about sixty years old. And farther, he saith, that he having contracted an acquaintance with him, they had frequent conferences together; and that in them he learned from him what was the religion, polic}^, and manner, of living of the Jews, wherein they differed from other nations; all which, he saith, this Hezekias had with 1 Diodor. et Plutarch, lib. 19. 2 Joseph. Antiq.lib. 12. c. 1. et contra Apion. lib. 1, 2. 3 Josepti. contra Apion. lib, 2. 4 Joseph. Antiq. lib. 12. c. 1. 5 Joseph, contra Apion. lib. J. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 405 hirn written in a book; which book, no doubt, was the book of the law of Mo- ses. And I doubt not it was by this person that he was induced to have so favourable an opinion of the Jews and their religion, and that it was from him that he received the information of most of that which he wrote of them: for he composed a particular history of the Jews,' therein treating of them from Abraham down to his time; in which he speaks so honourably of them, and their religion, that Origen- tells us, Herennius Philo,^ a heathen writer, who flourished about the time of Trajan the Roman emperor, did for this reason raise a doubt, whether it were the genuine work of Hecataeus, or no; making this inference from hence concerning it: — That either it was composed by some Jew under the name of Hecatseus, or else, if he were the true author of it, he was corrupted to the Jewish religion when he wrote it. If one of these two must be the truth (though I see no necessity for it,) the latter is as possible as the other. This Hecatseus'' was of Abdera, a Grecian city in Thrace, which had been famous for the birth of Democritus, Protagoras, and other learned men. He was bred up with Alexander, and followed him in all his wars, and, after his death, put himself under the protection of Ptolemy, and lived with him in Egypt; where having, from the conversation which he had with this learned Jew, and others of that nation, who followed Ptolemy thither, fully informed himself of their laws, customs, and religion, he wrote that history of them which I have mentioned; out of which Josephus hath extracted several passa- ges in his writings, especially in his first book against Apion. But the book itself is not now extant. There was another very noted historian of the same name; but he was a Milesian, and lived long before, in the time of Darius Hystaspes. Josephus* tells us of another Jew, called Mossollam, who, about this time, fol- lowed Ptolemy, and had listed himself a horseman in his army; and out of the same Hecataeus, gives us a very remarkable story of him; the words of He- cata2us are as follow: — "As I was travelling toward the Red Sea, there was in company with us a certain Jew, called Mossollam, one of a Jewish troop of horse that was sent to be our convoy, a very valiant man, and remarkable for his great skill in archery, in which he excelled even all the Greeks and barba- rians of his time. As several of us were travelling on in this journey together, a certain soothsayer, who took upon him to foretell the fortune of our journey, bade us all stand still, and we did so. Whereon this Jew asked us what we stood for. Look ye, answered the cunning man, and showed him a bird. If that bird stands, said he, ye are to stand; and if he riseth and flies on, ye are to go forward too; but if the bird take its flight the contrary way, you must all go back again. The Jew hereat, without a word speaking, lets fly an arrow, and kills the bird; whereon the diviner, and some of the company, had great indignation, and fell on him in most outrageous terms. Why, certainly, said the Jew to them, are ye not all mad to make such a bustle about a foolish bird? How could that poor wretched creature pretend to foreshow us our fortune, that knew nothing of its own? If this bird could have foretold good or evil to come, it would have kept out of this place, for fear of being slain by the arrow of MosoUam the Jew." Thus far Hecatsus, who, it is plain, tells this story of pur- pose to expose and condemn the superstition of the heathens, which then ob- tained concerning sucli matters, and to commend and extol the wisdom of the Jews, in rejecting and despising all those follies. An. -311. Jllex. JEgus 6.] — Antigonus, having thus recovered all Syria, Phoe- nicia, and Judea, out of the hands of Ptolemy,'' sent Athenaius, one of his lieu- tenants, Avith an army against the Nabathaian Arabs. They, being a clan of thieves, had made inroads upon the countries now under his command, and carried ofl*much plunder from them, and, to be revenged of them for it, Anti- 1 Eiiseb. Pr>Tp. Evaiiff. lib. 9. Joseph. Antiq. lib. 1. c. 8. et contra Apion. lib. 1. 2 Contra CeUvm, lib. I. 3 Vide Vo.«siuni de Hist. Gr. lib. 2. c. 10. 4 Vide Vossium de Hist. Gr. lib. 1. c. 10. 5 Contia Apioneni, lib. I. 6 Oiodor. Sic. lib. It). 406 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF gonus sent these forces against them. The chief city of those Arabs was Petra: which, standing on a high rock in the deserts, was from thence called by the Greeks, Petra, by the Hebrews, Sela,' and by the Arabs, Hagar: for Hao-ar* signifieth the same in Arabic that Sela doth in Hebrew, and Petra in Greek, that is, a rock, and hence it is that St. PauP calls Mount Sinai Hagar; for that was all a rocky mountain, which, beginning at the Red Sea, runs a great way into Arabia; and on part of it the city of Petra was built. There being a cer- tain mart at stated seasons held in the neighbourhood,^ the Nabathseans havino" lefl their wives, children, and aged, with their goods, under a guard at Petra, were gone to this mart. Athenseus craftily laying hold of this opportunity, by long marches, got to Petra in their absence, and having surprised the place, slew the guards, and carried off all the plunder that he found in the place, and then marched back with as much speed as he came; and when he had gotten at such a distance, that he thought himself out of the reach of the enemy, he stopped to refresh his men with rest, now tired out with so long a march; but, not taking sufficient care to secure his encampment, the enemy having gotten early notice of what he had done, made a speedy pursuit after him, and falling upon him in the night, while his men were all drowned in sleep and weariness, Ihey cut off all of them, excepting only fifty horsemen that escaped, and reco- vered the whole booty. After this, returning to Petra, they from thence wrote letters to Antigonus in the Syriac language, accusing Athenaeus of the wrong he had done them. To which Antigonus, temporizing with the present neces- sity, returned such an answer as disowned the enterprise of Athenseus, and al- lowed the revenge as just which they had taken of him. But, as soon as he had gotten more forces ready, he sent his son Demetrius^ with them to execute that vengeance upon those robbers which the other failed of. Who, having re- ceived his orders, marched with all the haste he could, hoping to be upon them before they should know of his coming. But his march being discovered, no- tice was given of it by fires all over the country; which immediately brought them all together to Petra, where they having left a strong garrison, and divided the booty between them, which had been there laid up, fled with it into the deserts, driving all their flocks and herds with them. So that Demetrius, on his coming thither, finding the place too well provided to be taken, made peace with those people upon the best terms he could, and returned; and, after a march of three hundred furlongs (which is about thirty-six of our miles,) he came to the Lake Asphaltites, and there encamped. This was also called by some the Sea of Sodom, by others the Dead Sea, and in scripture the Salt Sea.* It was called the Sea of Sodom, because there Sodom once stood; the Dead Sea, because it is stagnated water without any motion, and in which no living creature is said to be found, because of its exceeding saltness; and Asphaltites, from the Greek word Asphaltus, which signifieth bitumen;' which it produceth in great quantities, and the best that can any where be found. And this last is the name by which the Greeks and Latins called it. At present, the adjacent inhabitants call it the Lake of Lot.^ It extends," from north to south, about seventy of our miles in length, and is about eighteen miles over in the broadest place. On the east side of it anciently lay the land of Moab, and on the west side that part of the land of Canaan which was the portion of the tribe of Judah; and, toward the south, it abutted upon the land of Edom. The Rivers Jordan and Arnon run imto it at the north end, and are there lost. For nothing runs out of it again; but, like the Caspian Sea, it receives brooks and rivers into it, and emits none out; wherein it is of a contrary nature to the sea or lake of Tiberias (called the Sea of Galilee,'" and the Lake of Gene zaret," in the Gospels,) on which ourFa- 1 laa. xvi. 1. 2 Kings xiv. 7. 2 Vide Bocharti Geograph. Sacram, part \. lib. 4. c. 27. 3 In the Epistle lo the Galatians, ch. iv. ver. 25. 4 Diodor. Sic. lib. 19. 5 Plut. in Demetrin. Diodor. Sic. lib. 19. 6 Gen. xiv. 3. Numb, xxxiv. 3. 12. Dent. iii. 17. Josh. iii. 16. 7 Plin. lib. 5. c. 16. 8 Baudrandri Geographia, sub voce Asphaltites. 9 See Maundrel's Journey to Jerusalem, p. 83, 84. Thevenot's Travels, part I. book 2 c. 4|. 10 Malt. iv. 18. XV. 29. Mark i. 16. John vi. 1. 11 Luke v. 1. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 497 viour was so conversant; for that, as it receive th the River Jordan at one end, so emits it again at the other. But when it falls from thence into the Lake As- phaltites, it is there absorbed, and no more heard of. Demetrius, on his en- camping on this lake,' observing the nature of it, and that a good revenue might be made of the bitumen which it yielded, gave Antigonus an account of it on his return. Antigonus, though no way pleased with the peace which he liad made with the Nabatha;ans, whom he sent him to destroy, yet applauded him for the discovery he had made of a way for the augmenting of his revenue by the bitumen of this lake, and immediately sent thither Jerome the Cardian to take care of it. But when he had, according to his instructions, gotten ready several boats fit for the purpose, and was gathering into them all the bitumen of the lake to carry it all to one place, there to be disposed of for the benefit of Antigonus, the Arabs, to the number of six thousand men, fell upon him, and, having destroyed his boats, and slain most of his men employed in them for this work, drove him thence, and thereby put an end to this project. This Je- rome," being a fellow-citizen of Eumenes, followed his party to the time of his death; but, being then taken prisoner by Antigonus, he after that entered into his service, and was appointed by him to this employment. Many years after this, he was governor of Syria for Antiochus Soter,* the son of Seleucus: for he lived to a great age,'' being one hundred and four years old at the time of his death; and his eminent skill in all affairs, both of the camp and cabinet, recom- mended him to the favour and first respects of the princes under whom he served. He wrote the history of Alexander, and his successors, and their pos- terity down to the time of Ptolemy Philadelphus, and beyond it; but though he had lived long in Syria and Phoenicia, first under Antigonus, and afterward under Seleucus, and Antiochus his son, and therefore was well acquainted with the state and affairs of the Jews, and had many occasions in his history to make mention of them; yet he passed them over in a tetal silence, not speaking as much as one word of them; for which he is faulted by Josephus,^ as if his ne- glect of them proceeded from his malice and envy toward those people. Antigonus, receiving an account from Nicanor of the successes of Seleucus in the east,® sent Demetrius his son with an army to Babylon to drive hira thence, and recover that province out of his hands. In the interim, he himself marched toward the maritime parts of Lesser Asia, to suppress the power of the three confederated princes, which was there growing against him, and appointed a time for his son to come thither to him, after he should have executed the commission on which he sent him to Babylon. Demetrius, according to his father's order, having gathered his forces together at Damascus, marched thence to Babylon; and Seleucus, being then absent in Media, he entered that city without opposition. For Patrocles, whom Seleucus had left his lieutenant in that place, finding himself not strong enough to encounter Demetrius, had re- treated with those forces he had with him into the fens; where, being surrounded with rivers, ditches, and morasses, he there protected himself by the inaccesst- bleness of the place, and ordered all the rest to flee out of the city; whereof eome passing the Tigris and others retreating into the deserts, and others in other places of safety, thereby saved themselves till the enemy was again retreated. Demetrius, finding the city deserted, laid siege to the castles: for there were two of them in that city, well garrisoned, and of large extent. These were the two palaces which I have described^ of which one stood on the one side of the Euphrates, and the other on the other side, just over against it. One of these he took, and having expelled the garrison of Seleucus, placed one of his own in it of seven thousand men. The other held out till the time limited to him by his father for his return. And therefore, leaving Archelaus, one of his principal commanders, with one thousand horse and five thousand foot to coa- 1 Diodor. ?io. liti. 1!). 2 Vide Vossium de Hist. Grtecis, lib. 1. c. II. 3 Josephus contra .Apion. lib. ]. Where observe, the translators here put Aiitigoiuis instead of Anti»- bus, by a wrong variation from the Greek te.xt. 4 Lucianus de LongiEvis. 5 Lib. 1. contra Apion. G Diodor. Sic. lib. 10. Plutarch, in Uemet. 408 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF .tinne the siege he marched back with the rest of his army into Lesser Asia, to the assistance of his father, having first plundered the whole province of Babylon of all he could lay his hands on in it; by which he absolutely alienated the hearts of all the people from Antigonus, and firmly united them to Seleucus, and his interest ever after. For even those who had till then been for Antigo- nus, concluding that his' forces would never have used them so, had there been any intentions for their returning to them again, took this act of depradation to be a declaration of their resolutions to desert them for the future; and, there- fore, they made their peace with Seleucus, and all went, without any farther reserve, entirely over to his interest. So that, on his returning to Babylon, after the retreat of Demetrius, he soon expelled the forces he had there left, recovered the castle he had garrisoned, and thenceforth settled his interest in those parts .upon so firm a foundation, that it could be never after any more shaken. And therefore from this year the Babylonians began the epocha of his kingdom, though all the other nations of Asia placed its commencement in the year be- fore, as I have already observed. Demetrius,' on his return into Lesser Asia, having raised the siege of Hali- camassus, which was besieged by Ptolemy, this brought on a treaty of peace between the confederated princes and Antigonus; in which it was agreed, that Cassander should have the command of all in Macedonia, till Alexander the son of Roxana, should be grown up; that Lysimachus should have Thrace; •Ptolemy, Egypt, and the adjacent parts of Lybia and Arabia; and Antigonus all Asia; and that all the Grecian cities should enjoy their liberties. But this agreement did not last long; for many infractions of it being pretended on both aides, as soon almost as it was made, this brought them all again into the war. But the true reason was the great power of Antigonus; and the daily growing of it was a continual terror to the other three, and therefore they could not sit quiet till they had suppressed it. An. 310. Alex. ^/Egus 7.] — Alexander, the son of Roxana, being grown up to the fourteenth year of his age, Cassander- thought it not consistent with his ambitious designs to let him live any longer: for, he being resolved to seize the kingdom of Macedon for himself, it was necessary for him first to make away with the true heir; and, therefore, sent to the castle of Amphipolis, where he had for several years shut up him and his mother, and caused them both to be there privately murdered. However, Ptolemy, in his' Canon, continues to reckon the years of his reign in the same manner as if he were alive, till at length ■those who had divided the empire of Alexander among them, after having long usurped the regal authority, took also the regal style, and declared themselves tcings, each in the particular countries which they had taken possession of. Polyspherchon, who governed in Peloponnesus, hearing of the death of Rox- ana and her son, laid hold of this occasion to make loud exclamations against 'Cassander for the fact,^ accusing him every where for the villany of it, that he might thereby excite the odium of the Macedonians against him. All this he pretended to do out of his zeal and affection for the house of Alexander; and, io make the greater show hereof, he sent for Hercules, the other son of Alex- •ander, which he had by Barsina, the widow of Memnon, and having gotten him ind his mother to him from Pergamus, where hitherto he had been brought. up, he proposed to the Macedonians the instating of him into his father's kingdom; which very much terrifying Cassander, soon brought him to an agreement with him on his own terms; and when he had gained those terms, having obtained all that he proposed for the better securing of himself in the possession of them, •he was easily induced by Cassander to cut off this son of Alexander's also. And therefore, the next year following, he caused him and his mother to be put to death in the same villanous manner, as Cassander had the other son and his mother before. And thus each acted his part in destroying the heirs, that 1 Diodor. in Deinet. Plutarch, lib. 10. 2 Diodor Sic. lib. 10. Pausani.is in Bceoticis. 3 Diodor. Sic. lib. 20. Pausaiiia in Rneoticis. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 409 after their death, they might, with the better safety, share the inheritance be- tween them. Ptolemy' having renewed the war against Antigonus, for the reason I have mentionecl, took by his lieutenants several cities from him in Cilicia and else- where. But Demetrius soon dispossessed him again of all in Cilicia; and other of Antigonus's lieutenants had the same success against him in other places. Only in Cyprus, Ptolemy having, by cutting off of Nicocles, king of Paphos, extmguished all the interest that Antigonus had in that island, thereby secured it wholly to himself. This year Epicurus," being thirty-two years old, first began to poison the world with his impious philosophy. He first taught it at Mitylene in the isle of Lesbos, and afterward at Lampsachus on the Hellespont, and after that at Athens, of which city he originally was. He returned thither in the thirty- seventh year of his age, and there kept his school in a garden, till the sixty- third year of his age, in which he died. According to him, all things were first made, and have ever since subsisted, by chance. For he denied that the world was created by the power of God, or is at all governed by his providence. He held also, that there is no future state; but that this world is every man's all and that the highest felicity attainable here, is the highest good that man is capa- ble of; and this he placed in indolence of body, and tranquillity of mind; but held that virtue and morality were the only true means of attaining thereto. And therefore, though our modern infidels build their impious doctrines upon Epicurus's philosophy, yet they cannot their immoral and wicked Kves. For if virtue alone be the only true way whereby to attain that indolence of body, and tranquillity of mind, in which, according to this scheme, the highest felicity of man doth consist, it must certainly be every man's highest wisdom to practice it. Out of this impious school have sprung the Sadducees of the Jews, the Zendichees of the Arabs, and the deists of the present age. The first of those, it is to be acknowledged, went no farther, than to the denial of angels, spirits, and a future state: for they acknowledged the world to be created by the power of God, and to be governed by his providence; and therefore, they received the law of Moses, but with the expectation of none other, than of temporal blessings for the reward of keeping it; but the other two go thorough-stitch with the w-hole of this impious scheme, excepting only that part of it which recom- mends a virtuous life. Jji. 309. Alex. JEgiisS.'] — Ptolemy, to make himself amends for his losses in Cilicia, invaded Pamphylia and Lycia,^ and other maritime parts of Asia, and divested Antigonus of Phaselis, Caunus, Mindus, and several other cities which he before held on those coasts. ^/i.308. Alex. A'lgm^.'] — And then,'' sailing into the ^Egean Sea, now called the Archipelago, he took in the island of Andrus; and from thence passing to the continent, there possessed himself of Sicyon, Corinth, and several other places. While he was in those parts, he entertained a correspondency Avith Cleopatra, the sister of Alexander. She was the same that was married to Alexander king of Epirus, at the time when her father Philip was slain, and fcad ever since the death of her husband (who fell in his wars in Italy) lived a widow, and, for several years past, had her residence at Sardis in Lydia; but being there ill used by Antigonus, under whose powder that city was, Ptolemy took that opportunity to draw her over to his party, and invited her to him, hoping to make her presence with him turn to his advantage in his war with Antigonus. But, when she had put herself upon the journey to go to him, Antigonus's lieutenant, who governed for him at Sardis, stopped her on the road; and having brought her back thither again, caused her, a little af'ter, by the order of Antigonus, privately to be put to death. Whereon Antigonus coming himself to Sardis, condemned to death those women of her retinue by 1 Diodnr. Sic. lib. 20. 2 Lacrtius in Vita Epicuri. See Staiilry's History of I'liilosophy, part 13. 3 Diodnr. Sic. lil). 20. 4 Ibid. Vol. I.— 52 410 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF whose hands the murder was committed, and then celebrated the funeral of the dead lady in a very solemn and sumptuous manner, thinking thereby to avoid the odium and infamy of the fact; whereas such hypocritical devices do most in the end prove those facts which they are contrived to disown, and rather in- crease than prevent the detestation that is due to the authors of them. But this was not the only vile fact he committed. Seleucus and Ptolemy built their interest upon the clemency and justice of their government, whereby they established to themselves lasting empires, which continued in their families for many generations after. But Antigonus, being a man of a quite contrary dis- position, acted all by violence, sticking at nothing that he thought would pro- mote his interest, how wicked and vile soever; and therefore, according to his rule of proceeding, every thing and every person was to be removed, that stood in the way of his designs, without any regard had either to justice or humanity; and thus he proceeded to support himself by force only, till, at length, that fail- ing, he lost both his empire and his life with it: and may such be the fate of all others that follow the same courses. An. 307. Alex. JEgus 10.] — Ophelias, prince of Lybia and Cyrene,' being slain by Agathocles king of Sicily, Ptolemy again recovered these provinces. Ophelias was a soldier of Alexander's, and, after his death, followed the fortune of Ptolemy, and went with him into Egypt. From thence he was sent by him to reduce Lybia and Cyrene to his obedience, these being provinces assigned to Ptolemy, as well as Egypt and Arabia, on the division of the empire; in which expedition having succeeded, and being thereon made governor for Ptole- my of these countries, he seized them for himself; and Ptolemy's other engage- ments against Antigonus and Demetrius not giving him leisure to look that way, he continued undisturbed in the possession of them till this year. But Aga- thocles being now in Africa, making war against the Carthaginians, and finding he wanted more strength to carry it on, invited Ophelias into an alliance with him, promising him no less than the empire of all Africa for the reward of the undertaking. This bait was readily swallowed by Ophelias; and therefore, having gotten together an army of twenty thousand men, after a long march, he joined Agathocles with them in the territories of the Carthaginians. But the wicked tyrant, when strengthened by so great a reinforcement, having gained all that he intended, treacherously cut off Ophelias, and used his army only for his own interest. How this succeeded with him, I shall not here relate. All that is to my purpose is, to show how Ptolemy after this again recovered the provinces of Lybia and Cyrene: for Ophelias, being thus slain, and this ill- projected expedition having drained those countries of all their forces, they forthwith fell again under the power of Ptolemy, without opposition, and he and his successors continued to hold them as provinces of the kingdom of Egypt for several ages after. And, under the protection of those princes, the colony of the Jews, which had been there planted by this first Ptolemy (as hath been above mentioned,) increased, and grew to a great number. For in the time ot Vespasian,- no fewer than three thousand of them were put to death in that country for one mutiny; and yet, wuthin a few years after,^ under the reign of Trajan, they mastered the whole province, and slew of the other inhabitants of it above two hundred thousand persons; which could not have been done, had not they been a great number that effected it. This Ophelias'* had for his wife Eurydice, a fair Athenian lady, of the descendants of Miltiades. On the death of her husband, she returned to Athens, Avhere Demetrius, meeting her the next year after, fell in love with her, and took her to wife. An. 306. Alex. JEgus IL] — For Demetrius'^ came thither in the beginning ol that year, to restore, as he pretended, the liberties of that and the other cities of Greece; but in reality to expel thence the garrison of Cassander, and de- 1 Diod Sic. lib. 20. Justin. lib. 22. c. 7. 2 Joseph, de Bello Jud. lib. 7. c. 31. 3 XiphUin. in Trajan* 4 Plut in Deraetrio. 5 Diodor. Sic. lib.20. Plut. in Deinet. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 4X1 press his power in those parts, which having fully effected by driving Deme trius Phalereus out of that city, he returned again to his father. This Demetrius Phalereus' had governed Athens under Cassander ten years And never were the Athenians under a more just government,* or enjoyed greater peace and happiness than while he presided over them; and, in acknow- ledgement hereof, they erected him as many statues in that city^ as there were days in the year; and than this a greater honour was never done to any citizen of that place; and of all this and much more was he well deserving: for he was not only a learned philosopher, but also a person of great wisdom, justice, and probity, and these virtues he exercised in a very eminent degree through all the acts of his government. On his now being dispossessed of it, he retired to Cassander, and, after his death, went into Egypt to Ptolemy, and is said there to have had the chief management of Ptolemy's library,^ and to have procured for it that translation of the Hebrew scriptures into Greek which we now call the Septuagint; of which we shall treat hereafter in its proper place, where we shall have occasion to speak more of him. Demetrius,- on his return from Athens,^ was sent by his father with a great fleet and army to dispossess Ptolemy of the island of Cyprus; and therefore, sailing thither, he made a descent upon it at Carpasia; and, having taken that city and Urania, he marched to Salamine, the capital of the whole island. Me- nelaus, the brother of Ptolemy, who was then chief commander for him in Cy- prus, being at that time with most of his forces in Salamine, went forth on his approach U) that place, and gave him battle; but being overborne by the num- ber and valour of the enemy, he was forced to retreat into the city, with the loss of one thousand of his men slain, and three thousand taken prisoners, and there prepare for the bearing of a siege. From whence Ptolemy, having an account sent him of his misfortune, got ready a great fleet with all the expedition he was able, and sailed thither for his succour. This brought on a great fight at sea between the contending princes; in which Demetrius having obtained the victory, Ptolemy Avas forced to take his flight back into Egypt with eight ships •only, leaving all behind him in the power of the conqueror; w^hereon the whole i«land of Cyprus, with all the forces, shipping, and magazines, that Ptolemy had therein, fell into his hands. The prisoners at land amounted to about seventeen thousand men, besides the mariners taken on board the fleet. Menelaus, the brother, and Leontiscus, the son of Ptolemy, being among the captives, Deme- trius sent them both home, with their friends and dependants, without ransom, in remembrance of the like kindness shown him by Ptolemy after the battle of Gaza. All the rest he incorporated into his own forces; so that hereby he very much increased his military strength, both by sea and land, as well as enlarged his father's dominions, by adding this large and rich island to them. Antigonus, on the news of this' victory, being very much elated by it, thence- forth assumed the title of king,'' and wore a crown, and sent another crown to Demetrius, and gave the title of king to him also; and from this time they both used it in all their epistles, orders, decrees, and other WTitings; which the Egyp- tians hearing of, that Ptolemy, to whom they bore great affection, might not seem lessened by his misfortunes, they gave him also the same title. This example being followed by Lysimachus, Cassander, and Seleucus, they also about the same time assumed the title of kings, each in their respective territories; in which they had all along before usurped the regal authority. An. 305. Alex. JEgas 12.] — By this time Seleucus was grown very great in the east.' For having slain Nicanor in battle, who was sent against him by An- tigonus, he not only secured to himself hereby Media, Assyria, and Babylon, 1 I,aertiiis in Vita DeniPt. Plialerei. Diod. i^ic. lib. 18. 2 Cic. (Ic l.egibiis, lib. 2. ct in Oratinno pro Rabirio. .^Elian. Hist. Var. lib. 3. c. 17. 3 Laert. ibid. Plin. lib. 34. c. 5. Strabo, lib. ii. Corn. Nep. in Miltiade. Plut. in Libro de Rcipiiblica gerendcE Prjcccptis. 4 Arist. Joseph. Antiq. lib. 12. c. 2. 5 Plut. in Dcmet. Diod. Sic. lib. 20. Just. lib. 1'). c. 2. 6 Plutarch, in Demetrio. Diodor. Sic. lib. 20. Justin, lib. 1.5. c. 2. 1 Maccab. i. 9. 7 Appian. in Syriacis. Diodor. Sic. lib. 19, 20. Justin, lib. i'i. c. 4. 412 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF but, carrying his arms farther, reduced under him Persia, Bactria, Hyrcauia^ and all the other provinces on this side the Indis, which Alexander had before made himself master of. Antigonus, to pursue the blow which Demetrius had given Ptolemy in Cy- prus,' drew together into Syria an army of near one hundred thousand meji for the invading of Egypt, hoping there to get as easy a victory over him as he had at Cyprus, and so dispossess him of that country also. While he marched thither wuth his bulky army, Demetrius his son coasted him with as great a fleet at sea, till they came both at Gaza; where, having concerted matters be- tween them, Demetrius sailed to make a descent upon the country at one of the mouths of the Nile, while Antigonus invaded it by land. It was not without great difficulties that Antigonus passed the deserts that lay between Palestine and Egypt, and when he was arrived in Egypt, he found much greater. And Demetrius met with no less at sea; for storms had much shattered his fleet, and Ptolemy had so well guarded all the mouths of the Nile, that he could find no access to put on shore at any of them; neither could Antigonus make any bet- ter progress with his army at land: for Ptolemy had so carefuUv provided against him in all places, and so strongly guarded all passes and avenues, that he could make no impression upon him any where, and (what afflicted him most) great numbers of his men daily deserted from him to the enemy. For Ptolemy having sent boats to several places on the river, where Antigonus's soldiers came for watering, caused it there to be proclaimed from those boats, within their hear- mg, that whoever should come over to him from Antigonus's army, if he were a common soldier, he should have two minas," and if a commander, a talent:' whereon great numbers of them, as well commanders as private soldiers, espe- cially of the mercenaries, went over to him, and that not only for the sake of the reward, but especially out of the greater liking they had to Ptolemy; for Antigonus being a crabbed old man,** and very haughty, morose, and severe, Ptolemy, by reason of the benignity of his temper, and his humane and cour- teous carriage, to all he had to do W'ith, had the affections of all men much be- yond him. Antigonus, therefore, after he had in vain hovered over the out- skirts of Egypt, till all his provisions were spent, finding he could gain no ad- vantage on Ptolemy, but that his army daily diminished by sickness and deser- tions, and he could no longer subsist the remainder in that country, was forced to return back into Syria with baffle and disgrace, having lost great numbers of his men at land, and many also of his ships at sea, in this unsuccessful expedi- tion. Hereon Ptolemy wrote to Lysimachus, Cassander, and Seleucus, of his success; and having renew^ed his league with them against this their common enemy, he became thenceforth firmly settled in his kingdom, and w^as never after any more disturbed in it. And therefore, Ptolemy, the astronomer, here placeth the beginning of his reign, and from hence reckoneth the years of it in his chronological canon. Therein, till now, he continued to compute by the years of Alexander ^gus, though he had been slain five years before. But this fortunate turn, in favour of Ptolemy, and the firm settlement which he obtained hereby in the throne, gave him a new epocha after that to go by, which took its beginning from the seventh day of November, nineteen years after the death of Alexander. Jin. 304. Ptolemy Soter 1.] — The Rhodians* subsisting chiefly by their trade with Egypt, for this reason adhered to the interest of Ptolemy; and when sent to by Antigonus for the assistance of some of their shipping in the Cyprian war, they refused to aid him with any for that undertaking. Antigonus, therefore, as soon as the Egyptian expedition was over, sent Demetrius, with a fleet and army, to reduce that island to his obedience. But, after a year's time spent in the siege of Rhodes, the chief city in it, not being able to take the place, he 1 Diodor. Sic. lib. 20. Plutarch, in Dcnielrio. 2 About six pounds five sliillings of our money. 3 About ono hundred and eichtyeicht pounds of our monev. I He was now about eighty years old. 5 Diodof. Sic. lib. 20. Plutarch, iu Demetrio. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 413 was content to make a peace with them upon the terms, that they should asso- ciate with Antigonus in all his wars, except only against Ptolemy. For it being chiefly by the assistance of Ptolemy that they were enabled to sustain so long a siege, and were at length so happily delivered from it, they would make no peace which should oblige them to act any thing against him; and when the enemy was gone, in acknowledgment of the aid which he had given them in this dangerous war, having, for the greater solemnity, first consulted the oracle of Jupiter Hammon about it, they consecrated unto him a grove, and, for his greater honour, made it a very sumptuous work, for, it being a furlong square, they surrounded it with a most stately portico on every side, and, from his name, called it the Ptolemeum; and there, according to the impious flattery of those times, they paid divine honours unto him: and, in commemoration of their being thus saved by him in this war,' they gave him the additional name of Soter, that is, the Saviour; by which he is commonly called by historians, to distin- guish him from the other Ptolemies, that after reigned in that country. An. '303. Ptolemy Soter 2.] — Seleucus, having secured himself in the. posses- sion of all the countries from the Euphrates to the River Indus, ^ made war upon Sandrocottus for the making of himself master of India also. This Sandrocot- tus^ was an Indian by birth, ^ and of a very mean original: but giving out that he would deliver his country from the tyranny of foreigners, under this pre- tence, got together an army, and by degrees, having increased it to a great number, took the advantage, while Alexander's successors were engaged in war against each other, to expel the Macedonians out of all those Indian provinces Avhich Alexander had conquered, and seized them to himself. To recover these provinces, Seleucus marched over the Indus: but, finding that Sandrocot- tus had by this time brought all India under his power, and from the several parts of it drawn into the field an army of six hundred thousand men, and had in it a vast number of elephants managed for the war, he thought not fit to run the hazard of engaging so great a power; and therefore, coming to a treaty with him, he agreed, that on his receiving from Sandrocottus five hundred of his elephants, he should, on that consideration, quit to him all his pretensions in India; and on these terms peace was made between them. And Seleucus, having thus settled this matter, marched back into the western parts to make war against Antigonus; the necessity whereof was one main cause that hasten- ed this peace with Sandrocottus. Jin. 302. Ptolemy Soter 3.1 — For Demetrius,* after he had ended his war with (he Rhodians, sailed a second time with a great fleet and army into Greece, under the same pretence of freeing the Grecian cities, but in reality to weaken and suppress the power of Ptolemy and Cassander in those parts, and there dispossessed Ptolemy of Sicyon, Corinth, and most of the other places which he held in Greece; and pressed so hard upon Cassander, that he was forced to sue to him for a peace. But when he found that none could be had, but upon the terms of resigning himself absolutely to the will and pleasure of Antigonus, he and Lysimachus, having had consultation hereupon, agreed both of them to send ambassadors to Seleucus and Ptolemy, with a representation of the case; by which it being made appear, that the designs of Antigonus were to suppress all the other successors of Alexander, and usurp the whole empire to himself, it was thought time for them all to unite together against him, for the bringing down of his overgrowing power. And therefore Ptolemy, Seleucus, Cassandei-, and Lysimachus, having confederated together for this purpose, this hastened Seleucus out of India back again into Assyria, there to provide for Iho war. The first operations of it began on the Hellespont. For Cassander and Lysi- machus, having concerted matters together on that side, it was agreed between them, that, while the former remained in Europe to make a stand against De- 1 Paiisari. in Alticis. 2 Diodor. Sic. lib. 20. Justin, lib. 15. c. 4. Appian, in Syriaci.s. 3 Justin. Dioilnr. Appian. ibid. Plutarch, in Ale-vandio. Strabo, lib. IC. Arrian.de Expeditlone Alexaa- dri, lib. 5. 4 Diodor. Sic. lib. 20. Plutarch, in Demct. Justin, lib. 15. c. 4, 414 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF metrius in those parts, the other, with as many forces as could be spared from both their territories, should make an invasion upon the provinces of Antigo- nus in Asia. And accordingly Lysimachus passed the Hellespont with a great army; and partly by force, and partly by desertions and revolts, reduced Phry- gia, Lydia, Lycaonia, and most of the countries from the Propontis to the River Meander, under his power. Antigonus was at Antlgonia, a new city built by him in the Upper Syria, and was there celebrating solemn games which he had appointed in that place, when the news of this invasion v.as first brought to him. On his hearing hereof, and the many revolts which had been made from him, he immediately broke up his sports, and, dismissing the assembly, forth- with set himself to prepare for a march against the enemy; and, as soon as he had gotten all the forces together which he had in those parts, he hastened with them over M mnt Taurus into Cilicia, and having at Quinda, in that province, taken out of the public treasury (which was there kept) what money he thought necessary, he therewith recruited and augmented his forces to a number suffi- cient for his purpose, and then marched directly against the enemy, retaking in his way many of those places which had revolted from him. Lysimachus, not finding himself strong enough to encounter Antigonus, stood upon the de- fensive only, till Seleucus and Ptolemy should coine up to his assistance; and in this manner wore out the year's war, till both sides were forced to go into winter-quarters. An. 301. Ptolemy Soter 4.] — In the beginning of the next year, Seleucus,' having gotten together a great army at Babylon, marched hence into Cappado- cia, for the pursuing of the war against Antigonus. Of which Antigonus hav- ing notice, sent for Demetrius out of Greece to his assistance; who, immedi- ately obeying his father's orders, transported himself to Ephesus, and recovered again that city to Antigonus, and many other adjacent places, which, on the coming of Lysimachus into Asia, had revolted from him. Ptolemy, on Antigonus's leaving Syria, took the advantage of his absence to • invade that country, and soon recovered again all Phcenicia, Judea, and Ccele- Syri^, excepting only Tyre and Sidon, which, being well garrisoned, held out against him for Antigonus. For the reduction of them, he first laid siege to Sidon; but, as he was carrying of it on, being informed that Antigonus had beaten Seleucus and Lysimachus, and was marching against him for the relief of the place, he suffered himself to be imposed on by this false report; and therefore, forthwith making a truce with the Sidonians for five months, raised the siege, and returned into Egypt. In the mean time, the forces of the confederated princes being got together, under the command of Seleuchus and Lysimachus on the one hand, and De- metrius having joined Antigonus on the other, the controversy between them was soon brought to a decisive issue in a fierce battle, wherein they engaged with their whole forces against each other, near a city in Phrygia called Ipsus; in which Antigonus being slain, and his army broken and defeated, the confede- rates gained an absolute victory. Antigonus was past eighty years old, some say past eighty-four, when he thus fell. Demetrius, finding the battle lost, and his father slain, made his escape to Ephesus, with five thousand foot and four thousand horse, which were all the remains which he could pick up of near ninetj' thousand men, with which he and his father entered the field of battle. With these he went on board his fleet, Avhich he had there left on his coming out of Greece; and, shifting from place to place, sometimes met with good for- tune and sometimes with bad: and although he still retained some territories in Greece and elsewhere, and afterward, for some years, reigned in Macedonia, yet he could never recover his father's empire; but for the seventeen years which he afterward lived, met with disappointments in all attempts which he made toward it, till at length, falling into the hands of Seleucus, he died in the 1 Diodor. Sic. lib. 20. Pluiarcli. in Deniet. Appian. in Syriacis. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 415 prison which he confined him to. Among the territories which he retained for some time after this battle, were Tyre and Sidon, and the island of Cyprus. After the death of Antigonus,' the four confederated princes divided his do- minions between them; and hereby the whole empire of Alexander became parted, and settled into four kingdoms. Ptolemy had Egypt, Lybia, Arabia, Coele-Syria, and Palestine; Cassander, Macedon and Greece; Lysimachus, Thrace, Bithynia, and some other of the provinces beyond the Hellespont and the Bosphorus; and Seleucus all the rest. And these four were the four horns of the he-goat mentioned in the prophecies of the prophet Daniel,^ which grew up after the breaking off of the first horn. That first horn was Alexander,' king of Grecia, who overthrew the kingdom of the Medes and Persians; and the other four horns were these four kings,'' who sprung up after him, and di- vided the empire between them. And these also were the four heads of the leopard,* spoken of in another place of the same prophecies. And their four kingdoms were the four parts, into which, according to the same prophet, the " kingdom of the mighty king (i. e. of Alexander) should be broken, and divided toward (?'. c. according to the number of) the four winds of heaven," among those four kings, "who should not be of his posterity," as neither of the four above-mentioned were. And therefore, by this last partition of the empire of Alexander, were all these prophecies exactly fulfilled. There were indeed for- mer partitions of it into provinces among governors, under the brother and son of Alexander. But this last only was a partition of it into kingdoms, among kings; and therefore, of this only can these prophecies be understood. For, it is plain, they speak of the four successors of Alexander, as of four kings,* where they are represented by four horns, they are expressly called so;' and where they are represented by four heads,* the very symbol speaks them so. For who are heads of kingdoms, but the kings that reign over them? the leopard in that prophecy was the empire of the Macedonians, and the four heads were the four kings that after Alexander divided it into four king- doms, and as kings reigned over them. But none of Alexander's successors were kings, till about three years before this last division of his empire was made. At first, indeed, there Avere five kings of these successors: but Anti- gonus, not being king above three years, and his kingdom being absolutely extinguished in his death, for this reason, these prophecies take no notice of him, but confine the succession of the great horn to these four only who conquered him- And it is farther to be observed, that though Antigonus and the other /our called themselves kings three years before the battle of Ipsus, which produced this last partition, yet it was till then only a precarious title, which each assumed by his own authority only. But, after this battle, there being a league made between the four survivors who conquered in it, whereby each of them had their dominions set out to them into so many kingdoms, and each of them were authorized by the consent of all to govern them as kings independent of all superiors; from this time only can their respective divisions be truly and properly reckoned as kingdoms, and they as kings to preside over them. And in all their contests, which they or their successors afterward had about the limits of their several kingdoms, they always a2:)pealed to this league, as the original charter by which they held their kingdoms, and that regal au- thority by which they reigned over them. And therefore, from the making of this league only, can they properly and in the truest sense be called kings; and they were four only, that is, Ptolemy, Seleucus, Cassander, and Lysimachus, that were so by virtue of it. And to these four do the prophecies refer. ./In. '300. Ptolemy Soicr 5.] — Onias, the first of that name, high-priest of the Jews, being dead, he was succeeded in the high-priesthood by Simon, his son,' who from the holiness of his life, and the great righteousness Avhich shone 1 niod. Sir. lib. 20. IMiit. ill Deinct. Appian. in Syri.icis. Polvbiiis. lib. 5. 2 Dan. viii. 3 Ibid. viii. 21. xi. '.t. 4 Ibi.l. viii. 22. xi. 4. " 5 Ibid. vii. fi. 0 Ibid. viii. 21, 22. xi. 4. 7 Ibid. viii. 21. 8 Ibid. vii. 6. 9 Joseph. An'iq. lib. 12. c. 2. Chroii. Alex. EuKeb. Chron. Synccllus ex Africaiin, 416 CONNEXION OF THE HISTORY OF forth in all his actions, was called Simon the Just. He was the first of that name that was high-priest, and lived in that office nine years. Seleucus, after his victory over Antigonus, having seized the Upper Syria,' there built Antioch on the River Orontes, which afterward for many ages be- came the queen of the east. For here the Syrian kings had the seat of their empire; and here the Roman governors who presided over the affairs of the east had their residence; and, when Christianity prevailed, it became the see of the chief patriarch of the Asian churches. It was situated on the River Orontes, at the distance of about twenty miles from the place where it falls into the Medi- terranean Sea. It is reckoned to be in the midway by land,^ between Con- stantinople and Alexandria in Egypt, and to be about seven hundred miles distant from each. He called it Antioch, some say, from the name of his father, others from the name of his son, and others from that of both. For Antiochus was the name of his father, as well as of the son that succeeded him in his kingdom.. He built sixteen other cities, which he called by the same name, whereof one was in Pisidia, of which mention is made in scripture.' But Antioch on the Orontes was the most remarkable of them. Antigonus had not long before built a city in the neighbourhood,^ which, from his name, he called Antigonia, and intended to have made it the chief seat of his empire. This Seleucus razed to the ground, and having employed the materials to build this new city, transplanted all the inhabitants thither. These cities having both stood on the Orontes, and very near each other, the benefit of the river, and the smaUness of the distance, made the transportation the more easy. He built also several other cities in that country,* whereof there were three of especial note; one of them he called Seleucia, from his own name; another Apamia, from Apama his wife, the daughter of Artabazus the Persian; and the third, Laodicea, from Laodice his mother. Apamia and Seleucia stood upon the same river with Antioch; the former above it, and the other fifteen miles below it, and five from the place where that river falls into the sea; and upon the same coast toward the south lay Laodicea. For the sake of these four cities, the country in which they stood had the name of Tetrapolis, i. e. the country of the four cities:" not but that there were several other cities in it; but these being of more eminent note, and making four distinct governments, on which all the rest were dependents, from hence they gave occasion for the name to that country; and, indeed, it was no more than an occasional name given it for this reason. The true name of it was Seleucis: this Seleucus gave it from his own name; and it extended south- ward as far as Ccele-Syria: for Syria was divided into three parts, Syri^ properly so called, Coele-Syria, or the Hollow^ Syria, and Syria Palestina. The first of these, which I call the Upper Syria, contained Commagena, Cyrrhestica, Seleucis, and some other small districts, and extended from the mountain Amanus on the north to the mountain Libanus on the south, and was afterward called Syria Antiochena. The second reached from Libanus to Anti-Libanus, including Damascus and its territories, which consisting mostly of deep valleys between high mountains, it was for this reason called Coele-Syria, i. e. the Hollow Syria, from Anti-Libanus to the borders of Egypt was Syria Palestina: and the maritime parts of the two latter, from Aradus to Gaza, was that which the Greeks called Phcenicia. But not only Seleucus, but Antioch itself, was also called Tetrapolis; but from another reason, that is, because it consisted of four quarters, as of so many cities: the first of them only was built by Seleucus; the second by those who flocked thither on its being made the capital of the Syro-Macedonian empire; the third by Seleucus Callinicus; and the fourth by Antiochus Epipha- nes. Each of these quarters had its poper wall, whereby it was separated from the rest, and was also enclosed by one common wall encompassing the whole. The place where it stood was very liable to earthquakes, and it often 1 Johan. Antiochenus Malela. Strabo, lid. 16. p. 749, 750, &,c. Appian. in Syriacis, Jus*, lib. ]5. c. 4 Diod. Sic. lib. 20. Julian, in Misopogone. 2 Baiirirandi GeoKraphia de Antiochia Magna. 3 Acts xiii. 14. 4 Strabo, et Diod. Sic. ibid. 5 Strabo, ibid. THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. 417 suffered exceedingly by them. However, it continued for near sixteen hundred years to be the chief city of the east, till at length,' A. D. 1265, it was taken from the western Christians by Bibars, sultan of Egypt, and utterly destroyed by him. Since that, Aleppo hath succeeded in its stead, to be the metropolis of those eastern parts. All the walls are still remaining," that is, the walls of each quarter, as well as those which surround the whole; but all being deso- lated within, excepting some few houses, which make only a small and con- temptible village, those four quarters of the city look only as so many fields within their enclosures. It is now called Anthakia, but is remarkable for no- thing else but its ruins. The patriarchal see^ which once adorned it, hath since its desolation been translated to Damascus. But he that hath at present the title of Patriarch of Antioch in that place scarce reacheth the figure formerly borne by the meanest deacon of that church: to so low a condition is the state of Christianity now sunk in those parts. Daphne was reckoned a suburb of this city,* though at the distance of about four or five of our miles from it. There Seleucus planted a grove which was ten miles in compass, and in the middle of it built a temple, and consecrated both to Apollo and Diana, making the whole an asylum. This was the same to Antioch that Baise was to Rome, and Canopus to Alexandria; that is, the place where the inhabitants resorted for their pleasures, for which it was excel- lently fitted. For it had most delicious fountains and rivulets of the best water,^ most pleasant walks of cyprees trees in the grove, and the purest air, and every thing else that nature could afford for pleasure and delight; which being farther improved by all the arts of luxury, whatsoever could any way ad- minister to a voluptuous enjoyment, was there to be had in the utmost excess;*^ and the Antiochians, as their corrupt inclinations led them, there resorted for it. So that though the place had been consecrated to Apollo and Diana, it was by the Antiochians in reality wholly devoted to Bacchus and Venus; which made it so infamous, that Daphnids moribus vivei-e, i. e. to live after the manners of Daphne, grew into a proverb, to express the most luxurious and dissolute way of living; and all that had any regard to their reputation for virtue and modesty avoided to go thither. And Cassius the Roman general, on his coming to An tioch, by public proclamation, prohibited all his soldiers from going to that place, under the penalty of being cashiered, that they might not be corrupted by the luxuries and debaucheries of it. It was so noted a place, that to distinguish this Antioch, near which it lay, from the many other cities that were of the same name elsewhere, as it was sometimes called Antioch on the Orontes, so was it as often called Antioch,^ e^^' A» J "( 6 1" '' 3 741 I2 0 D3 - 0 7 4 740 ■ 3 8 ■^ 8 > 5 739 4 9 f 9 6 738 5 10 2 10 7 737 6 11 !»11 8 736 7 12 12 9 735 8 13 13 3980 734 9 14 14 1 733 in '^. 1 15 2 732 II » 2 16 3 731 12 ^ 1 17 4 730 13 ;" 2 18 5 729 14 g 3 19 6 728 15 2". 4 'S 1 7 727 1.16 S. 5 - 0 3 " X 5' » 3 s ^ 8 726 g. 2 £ 1 ?3 3 9 725 5- 3 0. 2 r 4 3990 724 ?■ 4 -s 3 5 3091 723 5 0 4 6 2 722 6 c 5 7 3 721 7 Ta 0 1 8 4 720 8 S p 2 9 5 719 9 !» H 3 10 6 718 10 5 4 11 7 717 11 "B 5 12 8 716 12 c 6 13 9 715 13 ^ 7 14 4000 714 14 8 "S 1 1 713 15 9 3 0 2 712 16 10 S 3 3 711 17 11 3- 4 4 710 18 12 3. 5 5- 5 709 19 > 1 6 6 708 20 S- 2 7 7 707 21 3 8 The beginning of ihe kingdoms of Assyria and Babylon. Rezin king of Damascus, and Pekah king of Israel, make war against Aliaz, and besiege Jerusalem, but without success. Ahaz vanquished, and Judah greatly oppressed by Rezin and Pfikah. Ahaz calls in Tiglath Pileser, king of Assyria, to liis help, who slays Rt m, and leads part of Israel into captivity. Ahaz revolts from God, and wholly suppresseth his worship in Juda: P« i h slain by Hoshea. iq 3 Tiglath Pileser dies, and is succeeded by Salmanezer. Saimanezer invadeth Palestine, and maketh Samaria tributary to him. Ahaz dies, and is succeeded by Hezekiah. Sabacon, or So, the Eihiopin made king of Egypt. Hezekiah restored the true worship of God in Judah and Jerusalem. Salmanezer lays siege to Samaria. Salmaneser took Samaria, and extinguished the kingdom of Israel. Tobit led into captivity, at the end of the sixth Jewish year of the reign of Hezekiah. Salmaneser maketh war upon Tyre, and besiegeth it five years. Sevechus succeedeth So in the kingdom of Egypt. Salmaneser dieth, and is succeeded by Sennacherib. Sennacherib invadeth Judea. Ilezekiah's sickness. Merodach Baladan's embassy to Hezekiah. Sennacherib invadeth Egypt. Sennacherib, on his return from Egypt, invadeth Judea, and looaeth all his army, it being smitten by the hand of God. The l\Iedes revolt from Sennacherib, and make Deiocee king. 428 A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE << 5' s Qpj ^5 C 3 tdW >5 n 3 h5 ore 3 S^- S'o" g-^ ^Tq "<« I'S « •n r* ™ Fo go S'o r o •"o $■ (3 '■^ • --^ '^ •^ 8 706 22 4 a 1 14 4 Sennacherib, being slain, is succeeded by Esarhaddon his son. 9 705 23 5 w 2 ^1 5 Tirhakah succeedeth Sevechus in the kingdom of Egypt. 4010 704 24 3 1 3- 3 " o 6 1 703 25 1 2 g,4 ?? 3 7 2 702 26 S?=! 1 §■5 3 4 8 3 701 27 s:,% 2 ? 6 ? 5 9 4 700 28 1= 3 7 6 10 5 699 29 ?! 1 8 7 11 6 698 2 1 >■ 2 9 8 12 Hezekiah being dead, is succeeded by Manasseh his son- 7 697 SJ o ■^ 3 10 9 13 8 696 g 3 i 4 11 10 14 9 695 1 4 « 5 12 11 15 4020 694 CD e- B- 5 1 ' 13 12 16 1 693 6 ^\ 1 14 13 17 4022 692 7 hi 15 14 18 3 691 8 16 15 19 4 690 9 ^^3 17 16 20 5 689 10 S 4 3 o 3. 18 17 21 6 688 11 o 1 19 18 22 7 687 12 3 2 20 = ^ 23 On the death of Tirhakah ended the reign of the Ethiopian kings m Egypt, and an interregnum of two years succeeded. 8 686 13 i 3 21 5 2 24 9 683 14 n 4 3 C 22 « 1 3 25 Twelve princes seize the kingdom of Egypt, and govern it by a joint confederacy fifteen years. 4030 684 15 3 5 23 2 26 1 683 16 • 6 24 ^3 27 o 682 17 7 25 W 4 28 3 681 18 8 26 eg 5 29 4 680 19 > 1 27 1 ^ 30 Esarhaddon, king of Assyria, is made king of Babylon. 5 679 20 1 2 28 5 7 31 6 678 21 3 3 29 3 S i 9 32 7 677 22 &4 30 33 Esarhaddon invadeth Palestine; planteth a colony of foreigners in 3 E Samaria: takes Manasseh prisoner, and carries him in chains to ■ e o Babylon. 8 670 9,3 " 5 31 3- 34 Manasseh is restored, and the Cutheans in Samaria are infested with lions. 9 675 24 6 32 ill 35 4040 674 25 7 33 2-12 36 1 673 26 8 34 «13 37 2 672 27 9 35 14 38 3 671 28 10 36 15 39 4 670 29 11 ^ 1 40 Psammitichus, one of the twelve confederated princes of Egypt, hav- S 669 30 12 1 2 41 ing destroyed the rest, seizeth the whole kingdom to himself. 6 668 31 13 i. 3 42 7 667 32 o i- 4 3- c 43 Esarhaddon, being dead, is succeeded by Saosduchinus in the Assy- rian and Babylonian kingdoms. 8 666 33 a. 2 ? 5 44 9 665 34 g 3 6 45 'OSO 664 35 E 4 7 46 1 663 36 S 5 8 47 2 662 37 ? 6 9 48 3 6G1 38 7 10 49 4 660 39 8 11 50 5 659 40 9 12 51 C 658 41 10 13 52 4057 657 42 11 14 53 Deioces killed in battle by the king of Babylon and Assyria. 8 650 43 12 15 *fl 1 Phraortes his son succeeds him. 9 655 44 13 16 ? 2 Holofernes invadeth Judea, and is slain by Judith. 40CO C54 45 14 17 O :i 3 1 653 46 15 18 S 4 2 652 47 16 19 5 3 651 48 17 20 6 4 650 49 18 21 7 5 640 50 19 22 8 6 648 51 20 23 9 TO THE FOREGOING HISTORY. 429 c k! 3 5 3' ax «5 g5 » 3 >fl 5' ^ §■« ■<15 ■< OQ S.Ta o' p. ?-o = 2. ■a " r* o 24 Fo 10 7 G47 52 9 1 8 641) 53 ^ 2 25 11 9 C45 54 2. 3 28 12 4070 644 55 5" 4 27 13 J 643 > 1 3 ^ r u 0 3 28 14 Maiiasseli, being dead, is succeeded by Amnion his son. 2 642 3 § 2 6 29 15 3 641 '^ 3 7 30 18 Ammon is murdered by his servants. 4 640 o 1 8 31 17 He is succeeded by Josiah his son. 5 63i) 2. o 9 32 18 C 838 S- 3 10 33 19 7 637 4 11 34 20 8 630 5 12 35 21 9 635 6 13 30 0.7 Phraortes besieging Ninevah, is there slain. 4080 634 7 14 37 9 i Cyaxares his son succeeds him. 1 633 8 15 38 » 2 Josiah's first reformation of religion in Judea. 2 632 9 16 39 f.1 3 3 The Scythians invade the Upper Asia. 3 631 10 17 40 ? 4 4 630 11 18 41 5 5 629 12 19 42 6 Josiah's second reformation of religion in Judea. 6 628 13 20 43 7 Jeremiah first called to the prophetic office. 7 627 14 21 44 8 8 626 15 22 45 9 NabopoUasar rebels against the king of Assyria, and makes himself king; of Babylon. 9 625 16 ^ 1 46 10 4090 024 17 ^ 2 47 11 1 623 18 ^ 3 48 12 Josiah's third reformation of religion in Judea. 2 622 19 2. 4 49 13 3 621 20 S 5 50 14 4 620 21 £i 6 51 15 5 619 22 7 52 16 6 618 23 8 53 17 1097 617 24 9 54 18 Psammitichus, king of Egypt, dies. 8 616 25 10 ? 1 19 Is succeeded by Nechus his son, called Pharaoh Necho in the holy scrip- tures. 9 615 20 11 Sj 2 20 ilOO 614 27 12 3 21 1 613 28 13 4 22 2 6J2 29 14 5 23 Ninevah destroyed by the Modes and Babylonians. 3 611 30 15 6 24 4 610 31 16 7 25 Josia h slain in battle by Necho king of Egypt. 5 600 o 1 17 8 26 c_,o First, Jehoahaz, and after him Jehoiakim succeeds in his stead. 6 6(18 =■ 2 o 16 9 27 •5 7 607 3 3 19 10 28 8 608 • 4 12120 11 29 1 Nebuchadnezzar takes Jerusalem; from whence begin the seventy years' captivity of the Jews. 9 605 5 2 = 21 12 30 2 NabopoUasar, king of Babylon, dies, and is succeeded by Nebuchad- 1110 604 6 3^1 13 31 3 nezzar his son. 1 603 7 ex. 4| 2 14 32 4 Daniel interprets Nebuchadnezzar's dream. Jehoiakim rebels against Nebuchadnezzar. 2 602 8 5^ 3 15 33 5 = H 3 601 9 6' 4 16 3^1 6 4 600 10 7. 5 ^ 1 35 7 <-t ^ Darius the Median born. 5 539 11 8. 6 »2 3 30 8 11 2. -■ Cyrus born. Jehoiakim slain. 6 598 N 1 a. 9. 7 3 37 9 ^•5 1 Jcconiah carried into captivity, and Zedekiah made king in his stead. 7 597 5' 2 10. 8 4 38 10 2 8 596 =■ 3 11 9 5 39 11 3 9 595 4 12. 10 6 40 12 4 4120 594 5 13. 11 >1 ■o > 1 13 5 Ezfkiol called to the prophetic office. Pharaoh Hophra king of Egypt. 1 593 6 14. 12 i' 2 M 2 14 C S 592 7 15.13 ■" 3 1 3 15 7 Zedekiah confederates with Pharaoh Hopbra. 430 A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE s >< ^P a 5 bS 1^ o ►fl m'o- 5.75 >< J« "< Ciq Si's ||: K 2. CD ?'o o o r O ? o ?"• 1 26 38 30 Nebuchadnezzar distracted. 6 568 39 37 3 2 27 39 31 7 567 40 38 P 3 28 40 32 8 566 41 39 3- 4 29 41 33 9 565 42 40 5 30 42 34 1150 564 43 41 6 31 43 35 1 563 44 42 7 32 44 36 Nebuchadnezzar restored to his senses. 2 562 45 43 8 33 45 37 Dies in the thirty-seventh year of Jehoiachin's captivity. 3 561 H 1 9 34 46 Jehoiachin released and advanced. 4 560 2. 2 10 35 47 Evilmerodach slain by a conspiracy against him, and Astyages dies in Media. 5 559 1 3* 1 11 f 1 P3 48 Neriglissar succeeds in Babylon, and Cyaxares (the Darius Medus of the scriptures) in Media. Cyrus comes to the aid of the Medes against the Babylonians. 6 558 2J 2 12 i» 2 49 Great preparations made by the Medes and Babylonians for o war against each other. 7 557 S. 3 13 il 50 g 556 ^. 4 14 51 Cyrus being general of the Medes and Persians under Cyaxares, m "slays Neriglissar in battle. Laborosoarchod succeeds, and is " a; £. 5 slain. 4159 555 a 1 15 52 Nabonadius (the Belshazzar of the scriptures) succeeds Labo 4160 554 2 16 g 6 53 rosoarchod. 1 553 a- 3 17 54 Daniel saw the vision of the ram and the he-goat, chap. viii. 2 552 a 4 18 8 55 3 551 O 5 19 9 56 Belshazzar goes into Lesser Asia, and there hires a great army against Cyrus, of which Croesus takes the command. 4 550 6 20 10 57 Cyrus sends a spy into Croesus's army, by whom he hath intel- ligence of all there done. 5 549 7 21 Jl 58 Cyrus vanquishelh Croesus at the River Halys, pursues him to Sardis, and takes the city, and Croesus in it. 6 548 8 22 12 59 Cyrus brings all the Lesser Asia under his dominion. 7 547 9 23 13 CO 8 546 10 24 •14 01 9 4170 545 544 11 12 25 2'J 15 16 62 63 Cyrus having settled all affairs in the Lesser Asia, subdues Sy- ria, Palestine, and Arabia. 1 2 543 542 13 14 27 28 17 18 64 65 Cyrus marcheth into the Upper Asia, and reduceth all there un der his obedience. 3 54J 15 23 10 06 Cyrus returns into Assyria, and lays siege to Babylon. 4 540 16 30 20 67 5 5 539 17 31 21 C8 Cyrus takes Babylon, and slays Belshazzar. 538 1 32 22 09 Cyrus placeth his uncle Darius on the throne at Babylon, and O makes an expedition into Syria. 7 537 3. c 2 33 70 Darius dies at Babyloo, and Cyrus succeeds in the whole era pire. TO THE FOREGOING HISTORY. 431 Jb- ■a P •^5- 498 497 49fi 495 4220 494 493 492 491 490 489 488 487 486 485 484 483 482 481 480 2,1 530 535 534 533 532 531 530 529 528 527 52G 525 524 523 522 521 520 519 518 517 516 515 514 512 511 510 509 508 507 50r. 505 504 503 502 501 500 499 o a 39 40 41 42 43 44 :? 1 S 5 6 7 4 'A 5 G 7 8 10 11 12 13 14 15 10 17 18 lU 20 21 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 30 X J 2 3 4 Cyriis restores the Jews, and puts an end to their captivity, after se venty years. The Juws return to Jerusalem, and begin to rebuild the city and tem pie. The Samaritans obstruct them in it. The Samaritans corrupt the officers of Cyrus to discourage the work. Cyrus dies, being seventy years old. Cambyses his son succeeds iu the empire. He invadeth Egypt. Vanquisheth Psamminitus, who newly succeeded Amasis his father in the kingdom, and conquerelh the whole kingdom. Makes an expedition against the Ethiopians, and returns with loss. Slays the Egyptian god Apis, and commits many outrages among them. Returns into Syria, and there dies. The Magians seize the kingdom. The IVTagians slain, and Darius Hystaspis chosen king. The rebuilding of the temple resumed by the Jews. The Samaritans again disturb them, till a decree was obtained for the going on with the work. Which decree is brought to Jerusalem, and there executed. The Babylonians, revolting from Darius, are besieged by him. Babylon taken by Darius after a siege of twenty months. The temple rebuilt and dedicated. The Jews obtain sentence from Darius against the Samaritans about the tribute of Samaria. Darius passeth the Bosphorus and the Danube, to make war against the Scythians, and returns with the loss of half his army. Subdues Thrace, and returns to Susa. The Scythians ravage Thrace, and drive Miltiades out of Chersonesus. Darius sends Scylax with a fleet down the Indus to discover India. Scylax returns by the way of the ocean and the Red'Bea, and gives Darius an account of his discoveries. Darius invades and conquers India. The Persians, under the command of Arislagoras of Miletus, makes an attempt upon Naxus, and miscarry in it. Tyre restored. Aristagoras and the lonians revolt from Darius. The Athenians enter into a confederacy »*ith the lonians against Da- rius. They burn Sardis, wliich gave the fir&t rise to the Persian war against the Greeks. The Persians prevail against the lonians. Aristagoras flees into Thrace. Hestia;us Milesius returns into Ionia, and joins the revolt- ers. Aristagoras slain in Thrace. Miletus taken; the lonians reduced, and an end put to that war. HesticBus taken by the Persians, and crucified. The Persians reduce the Hellespont and Thracian Chersonesus, and force Miltiades to fly to Athens. Mardonius being sent by Darius to make war against the Greeks, mis- carries in the expedition, and returns with great loss. Darius sends heralds to demand earth and water of the Greeks. Two other generals sent against the Greeks in the place of Mardonius Zoroastres appears at the Persian court. The Persians invade Attica, and are defeated at Marathon. Darius makes great preparations to invade Greece in person. The Egyptians revolt from Darius. Darius declares Xerxes his successor, and dies. Xerxes confirms to the Jews all their privileges. Ueduccth Egypt. Resolves on a war with the Greeks, and makes great preparations for it. Enters into a league with the Carthaginians against the Greeks. Comes with a prodigious army to Sardis, and there winters. Passeth the Hellespont, marcheth into Greece, loseth the battle of Salamis, and returns with disgrace to Sardis. The Carthaginian! vanquished in Sicily by Gelo. 432 A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE c p' 3 • ?3 re 3 9> ■5 re a| re % as- re •5f P-re 5 479 7 58 5 The Persians vanquished at Plateea and Mycale on the same day. 6 478 8 59 6 Xerxes destroys the temple of Bel at Babylon. 7 477 9 60 7 Pausanias and Aristides pursue the war against the Persians. 4238 476 10 61 8 Pausanias suspected of treason by the Lacedemonians, is recalled. 9 475 11 62 9 Still carries on the treason for the betraying of Greece to Xer.xes. 4240 474 12 03 10 Is tried for it, and acquitted for want of full evidence. 1 473 13 64 11 Full discovery being made of his treason, he is put to death for it. 2 472 14 65 12 Themistocles being accused by the Lacedemonians of the same treason, is ac- quitted of it at Athens. 3 471 15 66 13 Themistocles being banished Athens for ten years, is again accused of the same treason by the Lacedemonians before the states of Greece, and thereby forced to fly into Persia. 4 470 16 67 14 Cimon, general of the Athenians, gains two victories over the Persians near the River Eurymedon, on the same day; the first by sea, and the second by land. 5 469 17 68 15 He makes many other conquests for the Athenians on the Hellespont and else- where. C 468 18 69 16 Xerxes discouraged by so many defeats, gives over the Grecian war. 7 467 19 70 17 8 466 20 71 13 9 465 21 T^ 19 Xerxes slain by the treason of Artabanus. 4250 464 > 1 73 20 Artaxerxes (the Ahasuerus of tlie book of Esther) succeeds, and slays Arta- banus. 1 463 2 2 re 74 21 He conquers his brother Hystaspes, and thereby becomes thoroughly settled in tlie throne. O 462 .3 o 75 22 Hereon he makes a great feast for all his nobles, and divorceth Vashti his queen. 3 461 = 4 76 23 A collection of virgins made for the king, of which Esther was one. 4 460 |5 77 24 Esther pleaseth the king, and becomes his concubine. The Egyptians revolt, and make Inarus their king. 5 459 i '^ 78 25 Achemenides, brother of the king, being sent against the Egyptians, is van- quished and slain, and the remainder of his army besieged in Mempliis. 6 458 7 79 20 Ezra sent to be governor of Judea. Esther is made queen. 7 457 8 SO 27 Ezra separated the Jews from their strange wives. Mordecai discovers the trea- son of Bigthan and Teresh. 8 456 9 1 81 28 Artabasus and Megabyzus raise the siege of Memphis, defeat Inarus, and besiege him and his Athenian auxiliaries in the island Prosopitis. 9 455 10 82 29 1260 451 11 83 30 They force Prosopitis, take Inarus prisoner, drive the Athenians out of Egypt, and again reduce all that country under the Persian king. 4261 453 12 84 a 1 Haman plotteth the destruction of the Jews. 2 452 13 85 f - Haman's plot defeated in his own destruction, and the feast of Purim instituted in remembrance of it. 3 451 14 86 5 3 4 450 15 87 • 4 Cimon sent by the Athenians to Cyprus with a great fleet. 5 449 16 88 5 Where he beats the Persians both by sea and land, and then dies at Cytium. Ar taxcrxes makes peace with the Athenians. 6 448 17 89 6 Inarus crucified, and Megabyzus rebels. 7 447 18 90 7 Megabyzus defeats the first army sent against him. 8 446 19 91 8 He defeats the second army sent against him, and is reconciled to the king. 9 445 20 92 9 Nehemiah sent governor to Judea, and rebuilds the walls of Jerusalem. Mega- byzus banished to Cyrta on the Red Sea. 4270 444 21 93 10 Nehemiah repeoples Jerusalem, and proceeds to reform church and state in Judah Ezra publisheth his edition of the Hebrew scriptures. 1 443 22 94 Jl 2 442 23 95 12 3 441 24 96 13 4 440 25 97 14 Megabyzus returns to the Persian court. 5 439 26 98 15 6 438 27 99 10 7 437 28 100 17 8 436 29 101 18 9 435 30 102 19 4280 434 31 103 20 1 433 32 104 21 Nehemiah goes from Jerusalem to the Persian court. 2 432 33 105 22 Mcto begun his cycle. 3 431 34 106 23 The Peloponnesian war began. A great plague broke out in the east. 4 430 35 107 24 It came to Athens, and grievously afflicted that city. 5 429 36 108 25 About this time flourished Malachi the prophet. • C 428 37 109 26 Ncliomiah comes again to Jerusalem, with a new commission. Plato the philoio- pher born. 7 427 36 110 27 Nehemiah goes on farther to reform the Jewish church and state. 8 426 39 111 28 The plague again broke out at Athens, which produced a law there for polygamy, 9 425 40 112 29 TO THE FOREGOING HISTORY. 433 «> 'H 3" 3 ■v^. 9> •0 7> o5 S" <=■ -1 j~ ~.'~' 5 'V o' r o '? s =•1 a 041 113 " 424 30 » 423 =■ 1 114 31 42-2 '^ o 115 32 421 |3 110 33 420 9 4 117 34 410 S 5 118 35 418 • 6 119 30 417 7 120 37 4ir. 8 121 38 415 9 122 39 414 10 123 40 413 11 124 ? 1 412 12 125 p 2 411 13 120 g-3 410 14 127 ?• 4 40y 15 128 5 408 16 129 C 407 17 130 7 , 40G 18 131 8 405 19 132 9 401 > 1 133 10 403 I2 134 11 402 5 3 135 12 401 J3 4 130 13 400 '■» 5 3 137 14 309 i 6 138 15 398 § 7 139 16 307 • 8 MO 17 390 9 141 18 395 10 142 19 394 11 143 20 393 12 144 21 392 13 145 22 391 14 146 23 390 15 147 24 389 16 148 25 388 17 149 20 387 18 150 27 386 19 151 28 385 20 152 29 384 21 153 30 383 22 154 31 382 23 155 32 381 24 156 33 380 25 157 34 379 2(i 158 35 378 27 159 30 377 28 100 37 37ti 29 161 38 375 30 102 39 374 31 103 40 373 ?•* 104 0 1 372 ;J3 105 =• 2 371 ;t4 IGO 2 3 370 35 107 § 4 309 30 108 • 5 308 37 109 0 307 38 170 7 3G6 39 171 8 3C5 40 172 9 ) 364 41 173 10 Artaxerxes dying, Xerxes his son succeeds. He is slain by Sopdianus, and 805- dianus by Ochus, who with the crown assumes the name of Dariua. Darius (commonly called Darius Nolhus) begins his reign. Vanquisheth Arsiies his brother, and puts him to death. Pisuthnes rebpls against Darius in Lesser Asia, and is vanquished and put to death by Tissaphernes, one of Darius's lieutenants. > 1 The Esyptians revolt from Darius, and make Amyrtaeus their king. 3 2 Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus, governors of Lesser Asia for Darius. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 2! 1 I 3 = 4 i 6 7 8 9 10 The last act of reformation by Nehcmiah, forty-nine years after it hadljeen begun by Ezra, where end the first seven weeks of Daniel's prophecy. The temple on Mount Gerizim began to be built by Manasseh. Cyrus the younger son of Darius sent to govern in Lesser Asia. Cyrus recalled to the Persian court. Darius dies, and Artaxerxes Mnemoa succeeds him. Athens taken, and the Peloponnesian war ended. Cyrus sent back agals to his government in Lesser Asia. He designeth war against his brother, and lists forces for this purpose. He marcheth toward Babylon, is vanquished in battle and Blain. Thimbro sent by the Lacedemonians into Lesser Asia to make war againei the Persians. Xexophon brings home the Greeks that followed Cyrus, and joins him. Dercyllidas succeeds Thimbro, [Socrates put to death by the Athenians.] And vigorously carries on the war against the Persians. Agesilaus passeth into Asia, to carry on the war there against the Persians. Vanquisheth Tissaphernes, who is thereon put to death by Artaxerxes. Agesilaus called home to defend his country against a confederacy of the Greeks against them. Conon wins the victory of Ciiidus. Conon rebuilds the walls of Athens, and again restores that city. The Lacedemonians renew the war in Asia against the Persians, but witit- out success. Artaxerxes makes great preparations for war against Cyprus. The Athenians sendChabrias to the assistance of Euagoras king of Qypnw, who reduceth the whole island to him. The peace of Antalcidas made between the Lacedemonians and the Pet sians. The Persians invade Cyprus with three hundred thousand men. And make an absolute conquest of that island. Artaxerxes invades the Caducians with ill success. Aristotle born. Artaxerxes resolves on a war to reduce Egypt. Pharnabazus appointed general for this war. He makes great preparations for it. Invades Egypt, and is forced to return with ill success. The Lacedemonians beaten at Leuctra by the Thebans. Jolianan, high-priest of the Jews, kills his brother Jeshua in the teoipte, te which the Persian governor lays a mulct upon the Jews for seven yMIK Vol.- 434 A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE c« C »< 9> ■a ^ - * 5" 3 ?3 .,5 Z^- h5 iq = !? m'o- 3« < "■ §.? 2. ~''l ■< ^ p -• r* 0 1 363 42 174 11 3- 0 2 362 43 175 12 2 4353 361 44 176 13 ?1 4 360 45 177 14 0 0 5 359 46 178 15 1 3 6 356 O 1 179 16 1 4 7 357 •" 2 180 17 5 8 356 3 181 18 6 9 355 4 182 19 7 4360 354 5 183 20 8 1 353 6 184 21 9 2 352 7 185 22 10 3 331 8 186 23 11 4 350 9 187 24 12 5 349 10 188 25 6 348 11 189 26 7 347 12 190 27 8 346 13 191 28 9 345 14 192 2'J 4370 344 15 193 30 1 343 10 194 31 a 342 17 193 32 3 34] 18 196 ST 1 4 340 19 197 a 2 5 339 20 198 1 3 6 338 21 199 ? 4 7 337 > 1 3 200 5 8 336 1 ^ 201 0 9 335 202 7 4380 334 =■ 2 203 8 1 333 ? 3 204 9 2 332 4 205 10 4383 331 > 1 206 11 4 330 a - 3 O. 207 12 5 329 3 208 13 6 328 4 209 14 7 327 5 210 15 8 326 6 211 10 9 325 7 212 17 4390 324 8 213 13 1 323 3; 214 19 2 322 h 215 20 3 321 p 3 210 0 1 3 5' 4 320 4 217 • 2 5 319 5 218 3 6 318 6 219 4 7 317 7 220 5 The battle of Mantinea between the Lacedemonians and the Thebans, is which the former lose the victory, and the latter their general Epami- nondas. Agesilaus goes into Egypt with an army to assist Tachos. He deserts Tachos, and makes Nectanebus king. He vanquishelh the enemies of Nectanebus. And fully settles him in the kingdom of Egypt. [Artaxerxes dies.] He returns homeward, and dies in the way on the coasts of Africa. Great revolts in the Persian empire on the succession of Ochus. Alexander the Great born at Pella in Macedonia. The Cyprians and PhcBnicians revolting from Ochus, are again reduceO Sidon taken, and destroyed by Ochus. Ochus i«vades Egypt, expels Nectanebus, and reduceth the whole country. Mentor made governor of Lesser Asia. Memnon his brother enters Into the Persian service. Plato the philosopher dies. Bagoas the eunuch poisoneth Ochus. and maketh Arogas or Arses king 1 221 G — 8 310 9 3J5 T 2 3 a. 222 7 4400 314 5 3 223 8 1 313 t^' 2-24 9 4402 312 1 5 10 1 ^ 1 re c 3 311 G 11 2 c 2 4 310 7 12 3 3 5 309 8 13 4 4 6 30-S 9 14 5 5 7 307 10 15 C 6 8 30t) 11 16 7 7 9 305 12 17 8 8 4410 304 18 9 9 1 303 19 10 10 2 302 20 11 11 3 301 21 12 12 4 300 M 1 3 13 13 S 299 o 2 14 14 6 298 13 15 15 7 297 ^ 4 10 16 8 296 5 17 17 9 295 C 18 18 4420 294 7 19 19 1 293 8 20 20 9 292 9 21 21 Antigoniis inarcheth info the east against Eumene^. EuMioiies betrayed into the hands of Antigoiius by his own soldiers and put to death. Seleucus, Ptolemy, Cassander, and Lysimachus confederate against Antigonus. Antigoniis dispussesseth Ptolemy of Syria, Phoeniria, and Judea. Antigonus leaveth Demetrius his son with part of his army in Phoeni- cia, ami marcheth with the other against Cassander. Ptolemy seizelh Cyprus, beats Demetrius at Gaza, and again recovers Syria and Phoenicia, and loseth them all again by the defeat of Cities his lieutenant. Seleucus seizeth Babylon. Demetrius marcheth to Babylon against Seleucus, and returns without success. Cassander slays Alexander JE^us with Roxana his mother. Epicurus first teacheth his impious philosophy. Ptolemy takes several cities from Antigonus in Lesser Asia. Ho lakes the isle of Andros, and Corinth, Sicyon, and several other cities on the continent of Greece. Hs' Ophelias slain by Agathocles, and Ptolemy recovers Lybia and Cyrene. Demetrius gains a great victory over Ptolemy at Cyprus, ani difl- possesseth him of that whole island. Antigonus hereon takes the title of king. Antigonus invadeth Egypt, and is repulsed with loss. 1 Demetrius besiegeth Rhodes without success. 2. 2 Seleucus having made himself master of all the provinces of Al- exander's empire beyond the Euphrates, invadeth India, and maketh peace with Sandrocottus. m 3 Seleucus, Ptolemy, Cassander, and Lysimachus, confederate against Antigonus. 4 They vanquish and slay him at Ipsus in Phrygia. 5 After this victory Ptnlemy had Judea, Phoenicia and Coele-Syri*: and Seleucus the Upper 9yria, where he builds Antioch. Demetrius gives his daughter Stratonice in marriage to Seleucus, and seizeth Citicia. Cassander dies in Macedonia. Pyrrhus marries Antigone the daughter of Berenice, Ptolemy's best beloved wife, and by his assistance recovers bis kingdom of Epirus. 9 Sama-ria wasted by Demetrius's soldiers from Tyre. 10 Ptolemy recovers Cyprus from Demetrius. J 1 Demetrius made king of Macedon, and there reigns seven years. 12 Seleucus builds Seleucia on the Tigris. 13 Simon the Just, high-priest of the Jews, dies, and is succeeded kr Eliezar his brother. END OF VOL. I. •^""^w_ Sk'